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![]() 01. A Complete Defence to 1.d4 http://hotfile.com/dl/19106612/f5108be/d4.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106613/bce1c0a/d4.part2.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106614/5ada7d4/d4.part3.rar.html 02. a6 Slav http://rapidshare.com/files/319232512/foxy2.part1.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319239656/foxy2.part2.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319246841/foxy2.part3.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319249293/foxy2.part4.rar.html 03. Albin Counter-Gambit http://rapidshare.com/files/319256223/foxy3.part1.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319263077/foxy3.part2.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319270662/foxy3.part3.rar.html 04. Alekhine Defence http://hotfile.com/dl/19106639/0962b91/Foxy_Openings_-_Alekhine.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106640/654c7f1/Foxy_Openings_-_Alekhine.part2.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106641/9feeada/Foxy_Openings_-_Alekhine.part3.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106642/d54267a/Foxy_Openings_-_Alekhine.part4.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106643/8453cb5/Foxy_Openings_-_Alekhine.part5.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106644/b8306ae/Foxy_Openings_-_Alekhine.part6.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106645/9794d60/Foxy_Openings_-_Alekhine.part7.rar.html 05. Annoying d-Pawn Openings http://hotfile.com/dl/19106620/1053862/Foxy_05.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106621/1af146c/Foxy_05.part2.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106622/c397a3e/Foxy_05.part3.rar.html 06. Anti-Flank Openings (Old Indian System) http://hotfile.com/dl/19106584/d8dfcae/006_-_Anti-Flank_Openings_(Old_Indian_system).part1.rar.htmlhttp://hotfile.com/dl/19106585/0a77b85/006_-_Anti-Flank_Openings_(Old_Indian_system).part2.rar.htmlhttp://hotfile.com/dl/19106586/fce7f6b/006_-_Anti-Flank_Openings_(Old_Indian_system).part3.rar.html 07. Anti-Kings Indian & Grunfeld System-"The Barry Attack" http://rapidshare.com/files/319278305/foxy7.part01.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319285716/foxy7.part02.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319292885/foxy7.part03.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319300822/foxy7.part04.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319308562/foxy7.part05.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319317187/foxy7.part06.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319325699/foxy7.part07.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319333122/foxy7.part08.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319334435/foxy7.part09.rar.html 08. Beating all the Anti-Sicilian Systems http://rapidshare.com/files/319342612/foxy8.part1.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319350996/foxy8.part2.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319351644/foxy8.part3.rar.html 09. Beating the Anti-Dutch Systems http://hotfile.com/dl/19107231/45c3b13/Beating_the_Anti-Dutch_Systems_by_Andrew_Martin.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19107232/92c2c98/Beating_the_Anti-Dutch_Systems_by_Andrew_Martin.part2.rar.html 10. Beating the King's Indian with "The Bayonet Attack" http://rapidshare.com/files/319360309/foxy10.part1.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319368704/foxy10.part2.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319377886/foxy10.part3.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319381474/foxy10.part4.rar.html 11. Beating the Pirc & Modern Defences "The 150 Attack" http://hotfile.com/dl/19106472/9c6c4de/foxyopeningspirc.part01.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106473/0216e21/foxyopeningspirc.part02.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106474/72f7942/foxyopeningspirc.part03.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106475/c1079da/foxyopeningspirc.part04.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106476/26f8860/foxyopeningspirc.part05.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106477/fd37960/foxyopeningspirc.part06.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106478/3089257/foxyopeningspirc.part07.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106479/ae9bfae/foxyopeningspirc.part08.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106480/9a864af/foxyopeningspirc.part09.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106481/3652778/foxyopeningspirc.part10.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106482/cbf45e7/foxyopeningspirc.part11.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106483/fe9a377/foxyopeningspirc.part12.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106484/1b56a3c/foxyopeningspirc.part13.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106485/af510ac/foxyopeningspirc.part14.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106486/92b8cb4/foxyopeningspirc.part15.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106487/4418c3e/foxyopeningspirc.part16.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106488/ac47d7a/foxyopeningspirc.part17.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106489/15a7b24/foxyopeningspirc.part18.rar.htm lhttp://hotfile.com/dl/19106490/34a1bd1/foxyopeningspirc.part19.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106491/73aba17/foxyopeningspirc.part20.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106492/0c7129c/foxyopeningspirc.part21.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106493/9be426e/foxyopeningspirc.part22.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106494/a3b9dec/foxyopeningspirc.part23.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106495/64d17b4/foxyopeningspirc.part24.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106496/8a497ed/foxyopeningspirc.part25.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106497/474c02b/foxyopeningspirc.part26.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106498/6e6bd9f/foxyopeningspirc.part27.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106499/f7fab9f/foxyopeningspirc.part28.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106500/df29ff9/foxyopeningspirc.part29.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106501/64305f8/foxyopeningspirc.part30.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106502/71d942e/foxyopeningspirc.part31.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106503/adedb6d/foxyopeningspirc.part32.rar.html 12. Benko Gambit Accepted http://rapidshare.com/files/319390407/foxy12.part1.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319400354/foxy12.part2.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319409721/foxy12.part3.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319419396/foxy12.part4.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319421415/foxy12.part5.rar.html 13. Benko Gambit Declined http://rapidshare.com/files/319430428/foxy13.part1.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319440223/foxy13.part2.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319450918/foxy13.part3.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319460990/foxy13.part4.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319470514/foxy13.part5.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319481094/foxy13.part6.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319490261/foxy13.part7.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319493771/foxy13.part8.rar.html 14. Blackmar-Diemer Gambit http://rapidshare.com/files/319502643/foxy14.part1.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319512334/foxy14.part2.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319520602/foxy14.part3.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319528399/foxy14.part4.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319537244/foxy14.part5.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319538115/foxy14.part6.rar.html 15. Budapest Gambit 16. c3 Sicilian http://rapidshare.com/files/319547161/foxy16.part1.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319556307/foxy16.part2.rar.html 17. Caro Krusher http://hotfile.com/dl/19106608/5cd7eb1/caro_crusher.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106609/e7e8632/caro_crusher.part2.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106610/0f64373/caro_crusher.part3.rar.html 18. Caro-Kann http://hotfile.com/dl/19106646/166d1e5/Foxy_Openings_-_Caro-Kann.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106647/74eae72/Foxy_Openings_-_Caro-Kann.part2.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106648/17bfa44/Foxy_Openings_-_Caro-Kann.part3.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106649/c3eb1a5/Foxy_Openings_-_Caro-Kann.part4.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106650/cf6b15f/Foxy_Openings_-_Caro-Kann.part5.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106652/fa9ca53/Foxy_Openings_-_Caro-Kann.part6.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106654/7fb51ee/Foxy_Openings_-_Caro-Kann.part7.rar.html 19. Center Counter Carnage! http://rapidshare.com/files/319564709/foxy19.part1.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319569973/foxy19.part2.rar.html 20. d4 Dynamite 21. Dashing Danish 22. English Defence http://hotfile.com/dl/19106661/2bf5723/Plasskett_James_-_The_English_Defence.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106662/420e8fe/Plasskett_James_-_The_English_Defence.part2.rar.html 23. f4 Sicilian http://rapidshare.com/files/319586064/foxy23.part1.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319582646/foxy23.part2.rar.html 24. French 1 25. French 2 26. Grunfeld http://hotfile.com/dl/19106615/b383cf2/Davies_-_Grunfeld.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106616/2cf1ca2/Davies_-_Grunfeld.part2.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106617/0080376/Davies_-_Grunfeld.part3.rar.html 27. King's Gambit http://hotfile.com/dl/19107236/d189cd4/King_s_Gambit_-_Andrew_Martin.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19107237/0ded7b0/King_s_Gambit_-_Andrew_Martin.part2.rar.html 28. King's Indian 1 http://rapidshare.com/files/319591866/foxy28.rar.html 29. King's Indian 2 http://rapidshare.com/files/319601275/foxy29.part1.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319603744/foxy29.part2.rar.html 30. The Kopec system 31. Kramnik-Shirov Counterattack 32. Leningrad Dutch http://rapidshare.com/files/319616178/foxy32.part1.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319617871/foxy32.part2.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/319619981/foxy32.part3.rar.html 33. McCutcheon French 34. Modern Benoni 35. 'Modern' Modern http://hotfile.com/dl/19106667/5b23645/The_Modern.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106668/4143257/The_Modern.part2.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106669/172f7ce/The_Modern.part3.rar.html 36. Morra Gambit Accepted http://hotfile.com/dl/19116754/9fce3be/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part01.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116755/1cf2d19/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part02.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116756/f39b4d7/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part03.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116757/7219660/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part04.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116758/b2df7f5/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part05.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116759/31a6bb0/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part06.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116760/b384cc9/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part07.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116761/33070f1/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part08.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116762/772f8f8/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part09.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116763/0c9401f/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part10.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116764/d923af0/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part11.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116765/803f1fc/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part12.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116766/c225636/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part13.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116767/a1ea1f9/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part14.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116768/152aaca/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part15.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116769/df4e5e3/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part16.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116770/660a20e/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part17.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116771/c894e49/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part18.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116772/6fcfe59/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part19.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116773/3bf6d87/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part20.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116774/90a44bf/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part21.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116775/e2fd0e9/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part22.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116776/61bc79c/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part23.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116777/0ad1995/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part24.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116778/43ce8af/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part25.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19116779/1f8e1c9/Foxy_opening_Morra_accepted.part26.rar.html 37. Morra Gambit Declined http://hotfile.com/dl/19106623/ddd6bcb/Foxy_37_-_Benko_Gambit_Declined.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106624/7ce027f/Foxy_37_-_Benko_Gambit_Declined.part2.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106625/1092beb/Foxy_37_-_Benko_Gambit_Declined.part3.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106626/a7c26cb/Foxy_37_-_Benko_Gambit_Declined.part4.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106627/473dc33/Foxy_37_-_Benko_Gambit_Declined.part5.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106628/6a3803a/Foxy_37_-_Benko_Gambit_Declined.part6.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106629/21aa1db/Foxy_37_-_Benko_Gambit_Declined.part7.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106630/d16d02d/Foxy_37_-_Benko_Gambit_Declined.part8.rar.html 38. Najdorf http://hotfile.com/dl/19106631/dcd5f52/Foxy_38.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106632/b79efd5/Foxy_38.part2.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106633/a0b7ef2/Foxy_38.part3.rar.html 39. Nimzo-Indian Defence 40. Nimzowitsch Defence (1...Nc6) http://hotfile.com/dl/19107238/9b6080e/Nimzowitsch_defence_-_Andrew_Martin.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19107239/020089c/Nimzowitsch_defence_-_Andrew_Martin.part2.rar.html 41. Portuguese (1. e4 e5 2. Bb5!) 42. Queen's Gambit 43. Ruy Lopez 44. Ruy Lopez - Moller Defence 45. Sicilian Dragon 46. Sicilicide http://hotfile.com/dl/19106663/04bcb56/Sicilicide_Davies_199x.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106664/4196522/Sicilicide_Davies_199x.part2.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106666/9f5c55d/Sicilicide_Davies_199x.part3.rar.html 47. Sidestep 48. Stonewall Dutch http://hotfile.com/dl/19106587/906890b/048_Stonewall_Dutch.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106588/2e3aeb0/048_Stonewall_Dutch.part2.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106589/dc6d2df/048_Stonewall_Dutch.part3.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106590/c6e943b/048_Stonewall_Dutch.part4.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106591/221b4fd/048_Stonewall_Dutch.part5.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106592/3d0ac97/048_Stonewall_Dutch.part6.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106593/0582489/048_Stonewall_Dutch.part7.rar.html 49. Strangling The Sicilian with 2.d3! 50. Torre Attack http://hotfile.com/dl/19106670/68a4ca8/The_Torre_Attack_by_GM_James_Plaskett.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106671/50ca988/The_Torre_Attack_by_GM_James_Plaskett.part2.rar.html 51. Trompowski 52. Trompowski-Main Line 53. Trompowski-Pseudo 54. Trompowski Success Nuevos y corregidos http://rapidshare.com/files/322086435/foxy54.rar.html 55. Untamed Chigorin! http://hotfile.com/dl/19106618/fa5e425/F0xy_55_(small_size).part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106619/78c6561/F0xy_55_(small_size).part2.rar.html 56. Win with 1...d6 Part 1 57. Win with 1...d6 Part 2 58. Combat Chess #1: Ten Lethal Weapons 59. Combat Chess #2: All Out Attack 60. Dirty Tricks #1 http://hotfile.com/dl/19106657/f2fdfd5/foxy60.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106658/ac561e9/foxy60.part2.rar.html 61. Dirty Tricks #2 http://hotfile.com/dl/19106659/6186398/foxy61.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106660/9858b0e/foxy61.part2.rar.html 62. 21st Century Secret Weapons #1 63. 21st Century Secret Weapons #2 64. Better Chess Now! "20:20 Calculation" http://rapidshare.com/files/320381569/foxy64.rar.html 65. Better Chess Now! "Positional Inspiration" http://rapidshare.com/files/321245651/foxy65.part1.rar.html http://rapidshare.com/files/321236628/foxy65.part2.rar.html 66. Better Chess Now! "Attack With Confidence" 67. Better Chess Now! "Endings - The Essentials" 68. Kasparov's Deadly Weapon - The Scotch Game http://rapidshare.com/files/319629790/foxy68.rar.html 69. Fisher's Deadly Weapon - Exchange Ruy Lopez http://rapidshare.com/files/319224713/foxy69.rar.html 70. Larsen's Deadly Weapon Repertoire http://rapidshare.com/files/322066711/foxy70.rar.html 71. 20 Deadly Sicilian Shockers 72. Learn the Opening 1-2-3 73. Learn the Middlegame 1-2-3 74. Learn the Endgame 1-2-3 75. The London System http://hotfile.com/dl/19106634/53501aa/Foxy_no75_-_Londen_System.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106635/5378b7e/Foxy_no75_-_Londen_System.part2.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106636/87f6b2b/Foxy_no75_-_Londen_System.part3.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106637/a6a02a4/Foxy_no75_-_Londen_System.part4.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106638/4baa4cd/Foxy_no75_-_Londen_System.part5.rar.html 76. The Hippo http://hotfile.com/dl/19106598/a93b6df/076_-_The_Hippo.part1.rar.html http://hotfile.com/dl/19106599/21648d5/076_-_The_Hippo.part2.rar.html 77. Sicilian Kan http://rapidshare.com/files/320544105/r77.part01.rar http://rapidshare.com/files/320553094/r77.part02.rar http://rapidshare.com/files/320554466/r77.part03.rar http://rapidshare.com/files/320541168/r77.part04.rar 78. Learn to Play the Nimzo-Indian The Easy Way 79. King's Gambit Part 1 80. King's Gambit Part 2 81. The Lion 82. The Sveshnikov Sicilian Easily Explained Part 1 (Andrew Martin) 83. The Sveshnikov Sicilian Easily Explained Part 2 (Andrew Martin) 84. The Basic Principles,Checkmates,and Elements of Easily Explained (Andrew Martin) 85. Essential Chess Tactics Easily Explained (Andrew Martin) 86. Dynamics of Strategy and How to Create a plan Easily Explained (Andrew Martin) 87. Attack/Defence/Space/Time Easily Explained (Andrew Martin) 88. Endgames Self-Training Easily Explained (Andrew Martin) 89. The Baltic Defence Easily Explained | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mon, 30 Nov 2009 19:48:00 +0000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| The Fabulous 00s: Week 2 USCL Opening of the Week (OOTW) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Week 2 USCL OOTWIn a GM matchup from round 2, we have Pascal Charbonneau (NY) tangling with GM Gregory Serper (SEA) in my favorite variation, the Sicilian Kan. Surprisingly, Serper goes wrong early and Charbonneau won convincingly. This sharp Sicilian Kan is this week’s Opening of the Week (OOTW) and we can learn a lot about move orders, nuances, and getting past the opening for black! The raw game score: Charbonneau (NY)-Serper (SEA) Sicilian Kan
12…Qc7? Oops! An unfortunate choice that sends black down the drain. Just to show that the Kan poses problems in quick play, here is a quick digression M. Ginsburg – D. Gurevich, G/30 Champs., Milwaukee, WI, 2002. Oops! Black has forgotten about this possibility in a turn of events eerily similar to the current game we are analyzing. 14…dxe5 15. fxe5 Bc5 16. Na4! White is winning. In another digression, just to show the Kan can create the pre-conditions for an upset, here is the great GM Dzindzihashvili taking too many chances and fumbling the ball against a young, inexperienced player in Chicago 1979. 1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 e6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 a6 5. Bd3 Nf6 6. O-O d6 7. c4 g6?! 8. Nc3 Bg7 9. Bg5 Nbd7 10. Kh1 b6 11. f4 Qc7 12. f5 gxf5 13. exf5 e5 14. Ne6! fxe6 15. fxe6 O-O 16. e7! Bb7 17. exf8=Q+ and white went on to win, M. Ginsburg – R. Dzindzihashvili, Chicago Masters/Experts 1979. A final digression showing the dangers, with apologies to Viktor Korchnoi who clearly wasn’t fully awake that day, 1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 e6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 a6 5. Bd3 Bc5 6. Nb3 Ba7 7. c4 Nc6 8. O-O Qh4? 9. N1d2 Nge7 10. c5! Yuck! 10…Ne5 11. Be2 b6 12. f4 N5c6 13. Nc4 bxc5 14. g3 Qh6 15. f5 Qf6 16. fxe6 Qxe6 17. Nd6+ Kf8 18. Bc4 1-0 Calvo-Korchnoi, Havana Olympiad 1966. But fear not, Kan supporters. This cagey opening can, and should, live! 13.e5! Nfd7 14.f5! … and White is completely winning already. A very depressing opening tableau for black. 14…Nxe5 15.fxe6 Bf6 16.Nd5 Bxd5 17.cxd5 Nxd3 18.Qxd3 fxe6 19.Nxe6 Qf7 20.Qg3 Ra7 21.Bc3 Nd7 22.Qxd6 Qe7 23.Qg3 Bxc3 24.bxc3 Nc5 25.Rae1 Nxe6 26.Rxe6 Qd8 27.Qe3 Rae7 28.Qxb6 Qxb6 29.Rxb6 Rc7 30.d6 Rf7 31.Kg1 a5 32.c4 Rxf1+ 33.Kxf1 Kf7 34.c5 Ke6 35.Rb7 Kd5 36.Rc7 Black resigns 1-0 So what happened? Serper didn’t react properly to Charbonneau’s common club-player plan of Bd2 and e5 (often with Rae1 thrown in). The trick is that Bd2 tangles white’s minor pieces up on the d-file and black has to be ready to find tactical chances to exploit that tangle. Let’s explore this a little bit more. First, we take as already on the board black’s 9th move which looks a little fancy (delaying queenside development), but is OK. White has just played 12. Bc1-d2 with obvious intentions. ![]() Position after White's 12th move in Charbonneau-Serper Here, as we know, Serper played 12…Qc7? which loses for tactical reasons. To exploit the tangle on the d-file after e4-e5, there are two black methods – placing a rook on d8 (after Qc7), or using the queen herself from d8. Black can’t do the first method here, since he’s already played the slow 9…Re8. So he needs to let the queen sit on d8 a little while longer to hold up e5. After looking at this second method, we’ll return to the game a bit earlier and indicate how black can use the first method with a more crafty move order. Let’s see it. 12…Nbd7! The first point is after the natural build-up 13. Rae1, black has the surprising 13…Nf8! and white’s e5 is definitely not playable. So white has to resort to slow methods and black has time to mobilize his whole army – the dream of the Hedgehog player who seeks to punch later in the middlegame. But what about the immediate 13. e5!? which certainly looks dangerous? This is critical, but black can hold. 12…Nbd7! 13. e5!? dxe5 14. fxe5 Nc5! There is no time for half-measures. This is a solid defense. Interestingly, there is another sharp defense here, 14…Bc5!? — after the plausible 14…Bc5!? 15. exf6?! Bxd4 16. fxg7 f5! black is all right. However, after the accurate 15. Nf3! black has problems. 15. exf6 Bxf6 16. Rxf6! I think it’s very plausible to think that aggressive Charbonneau would steer for this apparently devastating attack. Besides, on any other white move, black simply regains the piece with a very good game. However, black has resources here. ![]() Which way to take back? Position after 16. Rxf6! – Analysis The key for black is psychological – don’t lose your head when it appears your king is getting ripped apart! Objectively black is all right. The correct recapture is 16…Qxf6!. No points for 16…gxf6? 17. Qg4+ Kh8 18. Bxh7!! and the king IS getting ripped apart; white wins elegantly after 18…Kxh7 19. Rf1!! f5 20. Nxf5! – what a pleasure it is for white to play all these moves! – and black has no defense. So we have on the analysis board 16…Qxf6! After this, black can look forward to what former WC Boris Spassky valued most highly; piece activity. His coordinated activity saves him after, for example, 17. Nf3 Nxd3 18. Qxd3 Rac8 or 17. Nb3 Nxd3 18. Qxd3 e5!. In many variations, this mobile e-pawn generates plenty of play. Overall, chances are balanced in this sharp fight of two minors against the rook. Let’s see a nice sample variation on the analysis board. 16…Qxf6! 17. Nf3 Nxd3 18. Qxd3 Rac8 19. Rf1 Qf5! - a very pretty defensive resource. ![]() Nice defense! After 20. Qe2 Qc2! black is hassling white big-time, and after 20. Qxf5 exf5 21. b3 Rcd8 you don’t need to be a rocket scientist to observe all black’s pieces are running on all cylinders with level chances. Conclusion: Serper’s slow 9…Re8 is indeed playable but he needed to be alert after white’s 12th and find this narrow road. Let’s go back and try to set up black’s other method to deal with e4-e5, by placing a rook on d8. How to arrange this before white blows up the center? Here’s how to do it for all you Kan explorers in the audience: 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 e6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 a6 5.Bd3 Nf6 6.0-0 d6 7.c4 Be7 8.Nc3 b6 (no castles just yet) 9. f4 Bb7 10. Bd2 Nbd7 11. Qe2 Qc7 12. Rae1 and we reach a key moment. ![]() Black has to be careful As any good beginner’s book will tell you, be extra-careful when your king is not yet castled. Thus the principle idea of Ra8-d8, while good strategically here, is bad tactically. 12…Rad8? 13. Nd5! (the punishment) 13…exd5 14. exd5 Nc5 15. Bc2! and white is totally winning. Black wants to play Rd8, to hold up the e5 advance, but has to get the move order right. Thus correct here is the apparently dangerous 12…O-O! first. Let’s see it. The testing line to calculate, of course, is the e4-e5 push. With white’s king on g1, and not yet on h1, black has additional tactical possibilities. And this, in fact, is what justifies 12…O-O!. 12…O-O! 13. e5?! dxe5 14. fxe5 Bc5! Threatening d4 WITH CHECK and this is the saving nuance. 15. Rf4 What else? No going back now. White is already hoisted by his own petard. 15…Nxe5! A common tactical trick when there’s a d-file tangle. Kan players must always keep this trick in mind. 16. Qxe5 Qxe5 17. Rxe5 Rad8! and white is caught in a set of lethal pins, since 18. Rxc5 bxc5 does not help! Seattle wins the game and the match! Going back, 12…O-O 13. Kh1 allows black to realize his principle idea with 13…Rad8! and the game is level! Conclusion: black can achieve the R to d8 “method” to hold up e4-e5 in this white setup but must be wary of move-order tricks and traps. Overall conclusion: the Sicilian Kan lives! ![]() | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sat, 12 Sep 2009 16:43:26 +0000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 17th Sigeman Tournament has started - Nigel Short and Ivan Sokolov with wins in first round | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Two top seeded Grandmasters, Nigel Short of England (photo) and Ivan Sokolov of Bosnia and Herzegovina, have started with wins against local contenders Emanuel Berg and Tiger Hillarp Persson respectively. Berg defended with Sicilian Kan, but Short probably surprised him with an early 7.a4, on which Black failed to respond immediately 7...b6, as suggested in recently published book by another Swedish Grandmaster Johan Hellsten. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| CajaCanarias “win” Spanish Team Championship | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
This weekend the playoffs of the Spanish Team Championship took place in Motril, a town and municipality on the Mediterranean coast in the province of Granada, Spain. As always, it sounds even better when the Spaniards say it: “la Final Four de la División de Honor Nacional de Ajedrez”. You might remember from our article of September 10th that these Final Four qualifiers for the semi-finals were the teams Cajacanarias, Solvay, Mérida-Patrimonio-Ajoblanco and Linex-Magic-Mérida. ![]() The playoffs of the Spanish Team Ch were played in the Teatro Calderón de la Barca in Motril, Spain And so on Saturday November 1st, to start with there was a derby between the two teams from Mérida: Linex-Magix and Patrimonio-Ajoblanco. The reigning champs were the favourites, but only by a small margin. And eventually the match was not decided on the lower boards, where the rating difference was the biggest. In fact, the match was decided in one and the same ending! Spanish Team Ch Semi-Final
In the first game that ended, Michael Adams secured a draw with Black against Dmitry Jakovenko and then on boards 1 and 3 the same Ruy Lopez Berlin Defence appeared on the board, and both players of Linex-Magic, Ponomariov and Shirov, managed to win the ending against Karjakin and Eljanov respectively, putting the score at 2.5-0.5 for the (still reigning) champion of Spain. In a hard-fought game, Llanes and Candelario got into severe timetrouble and although he was starting to collect pawns, Candelario decided to play it safe and allowed a perpetual. The victory for the Magicians was secured when Akopian drew with Volokitin, while Sargissian messed up a totally game won position against Khamrakulov, leaving the final score 4-2 for Linex Magic. ![]() The match Linex-Magic - Patrimonio-Ajoblanco In the other semi-final CajaCanarias made their intentions clear: they smashed Solvay 4.5-1.5. Spanish Team Ch Semi-Final
Alexander Motylev beat one of Anand’s seconds in Bonn with Black: Surya Ganguly, who perhaps didn’t sleep too much in the last two days before the game. The Indian missed a check on c3 and could resign after 25 moves. ![]() Surya Ganguly: unfortunate with the white pieces Bareev didn’t have trouble refuting Mamedov’s old-fashioned way of treating the Bayonet King’s Indian and Illescas was a bit lucky when Ubilava, who after 52 moves had finally managed to equalize, suddenly blundered material. ![]() The match CajaCanarias - Solvay This meant that on Sunday, November 2 the final would be played between CajaCanarias and Linex-Magic. In the preliminary phase of the competition, the clash between these teams had ended in a 3-3 tie, the same result in the 2007-08 season, so an exciting final could be expected. And the fans got even more than they had hoped for! The individual scores of the big final: Spanish Team Ch Final
For the final, Ivanchuk had joined his team of CajaCanarias. (One day after his lost final against Nakamura in Cap d’Agde, the Ukrainian played chess in another Mediterranean coast town a bit more south of Europe!) He drew with Black against Shirov in a Sicilian Kan. Evgeny Alekseev, now on board two, defeated Linex-Magic’s Michael Adams from an almost equal position. Impressive endgame play! Sargissian defeated Illescas after the Spaniard made an early mistake in a Bf4 Queen’s Gambit. ![]() The big final: Linex-Magic - CajaCanarias with Shirov-Ivanchuk played on first board So another 3-3 tie! This meant that after dinner, at 22:00, the same players had to play a tiebreak with reversed colours. The rate of play of 15 minutes plus 10 seconds per move. And guess what… this match also ended in 3-3! Spanish Team Ch Final (tiebreak)
It wasn’t Ivanchuk’s weekend as far as quickplay was concerned: he lost with White to Shirov - the “Spatvian” (Mig’s excellent solution for Shirov to avoid a discussion like the one about Nakamura) played a great game with Black. Adams took revenge with White against Alekseev but how exactly is not clear because unfortunately the moves are not correct for this game. So Linex-Magic was doing well on the top boards, but on the lower ones they lost two games: Akopian went down with White against Bareev and Perez Candelario lost to San Segundo. And so after two more matches, the Spaniards still didn’t know which team was stronger: Linex-Magic or CajaCanarias! But they do know who is the new Spanish Champion, because the second tiebreaker system (according to the Spaniards, the “Dutch system”) looks at the win at the highest board. Because Alekseev had won his game on board two in the “regular” final, CajaCanarias was declared Spanish Team Champion 2008. ![]() Spanish Team Champions CajaCanarias, the team from the Canary Island of Tenerife, with Vassily Ivanchuk playing board one on Sunday ![]() Evgeny Alekseev, who played a very important role for his team CajaCanarias The match for 3rd/4th place was won by Spanish Team Ch Final (3rd/4th place)
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Tue, 04 Nov 2008 10:49:12 +0000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| CajaCanarias “win” Spanish Team Championship | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
This weekend the playoffs of the Spanish Team Championship took place in Motril, a town and municipality on the Mediterranean coast in the province of Granada, Spain. As always, it sounds even better when the Spaniards say it: “la Final Four de la División de Honor Nacional de Ajedrez”. You might remember from our article of September 10th that these Final Four qualifiers for the semi-finals were the teams Cajacanarias, Solvay, Mérida-Patrimonio-Ajoblanco and Linex-Magic-Mérida. ![]() The playoffs of the Spanish Team Ch were played in the Teatro Calderón de la Barca in Motril, Spain And so on Saturday November 1st, to start with there was a derby between the two teams from Mérida: Linex-Magix and Patrimonio-Ajoblanco. The reigning champs were the favourites, but only by a small margin. And eventually the match was not decided on the lower boards, where the rating difference was the biggest. In fact, the match was decided in one and the same ending! Spanish Team Ch Semi-Final
In the first game that ended, Michael Adams secured a draw with Black against Dmitry Jakovenko and then on boards 1 and 3 the same Ruy Lopez Berlin Defence appeared on the board, and both players of Linex-Magic, Ponomariov and Shirov, managed to win the ending against Karjakin and Eljanov respectively, putting the score at 2.5-0.5 for the (still reigning) champion of Spain. In a hard-fought game, Llanes and Candelario got into severe timetrouble and although he was starting to collect pawns, Candelario decided to play it safe and allowed a perpetual. The victory for the Magicians was secured when Akopian drew with Volokitin, while Sargissian messed up a totally game won position against Khamrakulov, leaving the final score 4-2 for Linex Magic. ![]() The match Linex-Magic - Patrimonio-Ajoblanco In the other semi-final CajaCanarias made their intentions clear: they smashed Solvay 4.5-1.5. Spanish Team Ch Semi-Final
Alexander Motylev beat one of Anand’s seconds in Bonn with Black: Surya Ganguly, who perhaps didn’t sleep too much in the last two days before the game. The Indian missed a check on c3 and could resign after 25 moves. ![]() Surya Ganguly: unfortunate with the white pieces Bareev didn’t have trouble refuting Mamedov’s old-fashioned way of treating the Bayonet King’s Indian and Illescas was a bit lucky when Ubilava, who after 52 moves had finally managed to equalize, suddenly blundered material. ![]() The match CajaCanarias - Solvay This meant that on Sunday, November 2 the final would be played between CajaCanarias and Linex-Magic. In the preliminary phase of the competition, the clash between these teams had ended in a 3-3 tie, the same result in the 2007-08 season, so an exciting final could be expected. And the fans got even more than they had hoped for! The individual scores of the big final: Spanish Team Ch Final
For the final, Ivanchuk had joined his team of CajaCanarias. (One day after his lost final against Nakamura in Cap d’Agde, the Ukrainian played chess in another Mediterranean coast town a bit more south of Europe!) He drew with Black against Shirov in a Sicilian Kan. Evgeny Alekseev, now on board two, defeated Linex-Magic’s Michael Adams from an almost equal position. Impressive endgame play! Sargissian defeated Illescas after the Spaniard made an early mistake in a Bf4 Queen’s Gambit. ![]() The big final: Linex-Magic - CajaCanarias with Shirov-Ivanchuk played on first board So another 3-3 tie! This meant that after dinner, at 22:00, the same players had to play a tiebreak with reversed colours. The rate of play of 15 minutes plus 10 seconds per move. And guess what… this match also ended in 3-3! Spanish Team Ch Final (tiebreak)
It wasn’t Ivanchuk’s weekend as far as quickplay was concerned: he lost with White to Shirov - the “Spatvian” (Mig’s excellent solution for Shirov to avoid a discussion like the one about Nakamura) played a great game with Black. Adams took revenge with White against Alekseev but how exactly is not clear because unfortunately the moves are not correct for this game. So Linex-Magic was doing well on the top boards, but on the lower ones they lost two games: Akopian went down with White against Bareev and Perez Candelario lost to San Segundo. And so after two more matches, the Spaniards still didn’t know which team was stronger: Linex-Magic or CajaCanarias! But they do know who is the new Spanish Champion, because the second tiebreaker system (according to the Spaniards, the “Dutch system”) looks at the win at the highest board. Because Alekseev had won his game on board two in the “regular” final, CajaCanarias was declared Spanish Team Champion 2008. ![]() Spanish Team Champions CajaCanarias, the team from the Canary Island of Tenerife, with Vassily Ivanchuk playing board one on Sunday ![]() Evgeny Alekseev, who played a very important role for his team CajaCanarias The match for 3rd/4th place was won by Patrimonio-Ajoblanco: Spanish Team Ch Final (3rd/4th place)
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Tue, 04 Nov 2008 10:49:12 +0000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| The Fabulous 00s: USCL Week 7 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
USCL Week 7: Sicilian Kan ExcitementMatthew Herman (NY) - Ilya Krasik (BOS) USCL Week 7 Sicilian Kan My favorite opening! Black got a good game… 1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 e6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 a6 5. Nc3 Qc7 6. g3 Bb4 7. Bd2 I think 7. Ne2 is stronger with a later slow advance h3, g4, and Ng3. Kudrin played this way against me in a Bar Point International in the 1980s and a hard-fought draw resulted. 7…Nc6 8. a3 Be7 9. Be3 Nf6 10. Bg2 Some hidden ICC knowledge here. 10…Ne5 On ICC a certain Israeli GM who always shouts “ooh la la chess” has demonstrated to me in blitz that the surprising but logical 10… h5! is strong here. For example, 11. h3 h4 12. g4 and now 12…Ne5 13. O-O Nc4 14. Bc1 O-O 15. b3 Ne5 16. Bb2 Ng6! and through craftiness, eyeing f4, black is fine. Play could continue 17. Re1 d6 18. Nce2 Bd7 19. f4 d5! with excellent chances. 11. O-O Nc4 12. Bc1 O-O 13. b3 Na5 14. Bb2 Nc6 15. Kh1 d6 16. f4 Bd7 17. g4?! Hyper-aggressive - quite Bulgarian. But white’s name does not sound Bulgarian…. 17…Nxd4 18. g5 The “point” of the 17th move. But this doesn’t really work. I guess you could say it’s a high class bluff. 18…Nc6 In a Boylston blog entry, Marc Esserman points out 18…Nxe4! is a very good alternative here. For example, 19. Qxd4 Nxc3 20. Bxc3 f6! 21. f5 e5 22. Qd5+ Kh8 and white is out of steam. Or, 19. Nxe4 Nf5! 20. c4 Bc6 with insufficient compensation for white’s pawn minus. The text is also fine. 19. gxf6 Bxf6 Marc Esserman mentions 19…gxf6!? - after 20. Qh5 Kh8 21. Ne2!? Qa5!? chances are equal. But after 21. Rf3?! Rg8 22. Qxf7 Rg7 black is a little better. 20. e5 dxe5(!) 20…Be7 21. Ne4 leads to unclear complications after both 21…d5 22. Nf6+!? and 21…dxe5 22. fxe5. The text looks risky, but due to black’s improvement on move 21 I think it is good. 21. Ne4 White is certainly making menacing moves. But his king is also open. This is the key moment. 21…Be7? A reflexive retreat but this piece jams up black’s defenses. Also not good is 21… Bh4? 22. Qh5 Be7 23. fxe5 g6 24. Qh6 Nxe5 25. Ng5 Bxg5 26.Qxg5 and black collapses. Nevertheless there is a great resource here. It is 21… Kh8!! 22. Nxf6 (22. Qh5? g6 followed by Bg7 and black wins) 22…gxf6. Now if 23. Qf3 Nd4! 24. Qxb7 Qxb7 25. Bxb7 Rab8 leaves black on top. Let’s say white plays the more aggressive 23. Qh5. Doesn’t this look scary for black? No! 23…Rg8! and ignore what white is doing! White can never play Bg2xc6 because Bd7xc6 is CHECK. This is black’s secret weapon - the naked white king. Note in passing 23…f5? is weak due to 24. Rae1 f6 25. fxe5 Nxe5 26. Rxe5! fxe5 27. Re1 and white has exploited a tactical hole. After 23…Rg8!, if 24. Rad1 Rg6 25. fxe5 Na5! is a subtle and good answer, similar to the next line, which is 24. fxe5. On 24. fxe5, play might continue 24… Na5! — a very powerful shot to clear c6 for the bishop and hit c2. These are hard moves to find. If 25. Rf2 Bc6 26. Rg1 f5! and black has eliminated problems on the b2-h8 diagonal. 27. Qh4 Rg6! and he’s on his way to victory since he has completely taken over the initiative. This defensive motif deserves a picture. Position after 27…Rg6! (analysis). Black takes over the attack. Black’s game mistake of 21…Be7? is easy to understand. It’s very hard though to accept Ne4xf6 and the ruining of the pawns around the king, and the scary looking dark square holes with white’s bishop sitting on b2. In most Sicilians, black preserves at all cost the dark square bishop. This case was a big exception. In the game, black got into a logjam and after further inaccuracies white quickly broke through. 22. fxe5 Kh8! 22… Rfd8 23. Qh5 Rf8 24. Nf6+ is crushing. As Matthew Herman points out in the comments, black is already lost. 23. Qh5 g6? A fatal misstep in a tough position. 23…h6!? 24. Rxf7 Rxf7 25. Qxf7 Rf8 is good for black. But white can improve with 24. Nf6! Bc5 25. Rad1 Rad8? 26. Bc1! intending Bxh6. Black in turn can improve here with 25…Be8 and if 26. Bc1 Qxe5 and he fights on, although it’s good for white after 27. Qh3. Best seems the cold-blooded 23…Rad8! and if 24. Nf6 h6 25. Rad1 Nb8!! (very difficult to spot, defending and counter-attacking) 26. Bc1 Qxc2 27. Bxh6 Qg6! deals with white’s mating plans! As Matthew Herman points out in the comments, 23….Rad8 24. Rf6! wins for white. as does 23…h6 24. Rf6! A nice interference theme with the same winning move as the famous debacle Fischer-Benko US Championship 1963. Amusingly, Benko blamed this loss in his autobiography on too much partying with the ladies the evening prior. 24. Qh6 Nd8 25. Nf6 1-0
And for Something Different: Bellwether
On the financial news today, I heard the phrase “IBM is the bellwether of technology stocks.” I knew the term meant “an indicator” - as it goes, so do the tech stocks. I thought the word was “belleweather” as is “good weather” but that doesn’t make sense. I was wrong, it’s spelled “bellwether”. Where does this word with its strange spelling come from? I looked it up and I was surprised to see “castrated male sheep” was part of the word’s origins (www.dictionary.com). Ow! See below. And ‘bell’ may well indeed be from ‘belle’ (French, old English for ‘pretty’) - note the female connotations in the definition for ‘belle’ below applied then to the castrated male sheep in the compound word ‘bellwether’. What a fascinating word! Bellwether! Queens is the bellwether of the USCL East. A counter-argument can be made that ‘bell’ is just a bell so the Bellwether is the male castrated sheep with a bell around its neck (an “indicator” of the herd’s travels). We might have to time-travel back to Hastings, 1622, to learn the truth.
Belle –noun
This website is the bellwether of posts about bellwether. Ron Young is the bellwether of USCL Predictors. To prove the topicality of this apparent dribble, this just in on October 10th, 2008: “On Friday, General Electric (GE, Fortune 500) reported third-quarter financial results that were in line with estimates. The company posted a 10% drop in earnings from continuing operations and an 11% gain in revenue, meeting analyst expectations. The company is considered a stock market bellwether, so its financial results are closely watched. The company had previously lowered its guidance, citing the financial crisis. GE reaffirmed that outlook and also said its financial services arm, which has been hard hit by the crisis, reported a 30% drop in profit that met forecasts. GE shares rose 1% Friday morning.” And there’s even a bellwether town in Ohio. High-pitched baa! And on the Chess Teaching Front:From: Precious Garcia - Hello,I am Precious Garcia,My son is coming for an holiday in your area,His name is Andre,14 years.I want him to be busy in the day. I have decided to let him attend your lesson for 1 hours in a day in the morning or time that you will be chance. i want you to calculate the cost of 1 hours each day for Mon, Wed & Fri for the whole 1 Month and send me the total cost,i will be paying you with Certified check ,so get back to me with your cost.I have someone that will always drive him down to your house or lesson venue.Kindly get back to me with.1.YOUR CHARGE FOR 1 HOUR. 2.TOTAL CHARGES FOR 1 MONTH THAT HE WILL BE TAUGHT 3 TIMES PER WEEK.3. FULL NAME AND ADDRESS WITH ZIP CODE.4.YOUR PHONE NUMBER.Don’t hesitate to e-mail with your total charges.Thanks and looking to hearing from you soon. With Best Regards.Precious Garcia I gave the usual response of converting in Pounds Sterling and awakening the Caissic Intermediates. Waiting for Andre. Comic InterludeSherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson went on a camping Some hours later, Holmes awoke and nudged his “What does that tell you?” Watson pondered for a minute. “Astronomically, it Holmes was silent for a minute, then spoke. “Watson, you idiot, someone has stolen our tent.” Editor’s note: depending on your audience, substituting ‘asshole’ for ‘idiot’ in the punchline may generate more laughs. ![]() | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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