ANNOTATED GAME:
The Magician from Riga
Mikhail Tal (2475) vs. Vladamir Simagin (2625)
Annotated by: tag1153 (1434)
Chess opening: Caro-Kann defence (B12)
[ Interactive | Show all comments | All annotated games | View as: ]
Pages: · 1 2 · next »
 Mikhail Tal was perhaps the best attacking player of all time. The eighth World Champion was a calculating monster who loved to sacrifice pieces during attacking combinations. The game that follows was played during the 23rd USSR Championship (about four years before he won the title). Living up to his reputation as "the attacker's attacker", Tal forces Simagin to move his king 20 times out of 44 total moves! Enjoy:)

1. e4
Mikhail Tal was perhaps the best attacking player of all time. The eighth World Champion was a calculating monster who loved to sacrifice pieces during attacking combinations. The game that follows was played during the 23rd USSR Championship (about four years before he won the title). Living up to his reputation as "the attacker's attacker", Tal forces Simagin to move his king 20 times out of 44 total moves! Enjoy:)

-
 
1... c6
Black appears to be leaning towards a Caro Kann. Or is he?

-
 
2. d4 d6
!? One of Simagin's "pet" lines. Time to throw the book out of the window.

-
 
3. Nc3
Simple development. A more positional approach was 3. c4 (hitting d5 while expanding on the queenside).
2 comments
kv-ly (1268) on 05-Nov-08:
c4 is a more aggressive approach. I would think aggressive players like Victor Korchnoi would play that.
charleshiggie (2014) on 21-Jul-09:
Sorry are you trying to say that Tal was not aggressive?
-
 
3... Nf6
Developing as well and preparing to castle kingside.

-
 
4. f4
?! While deliberately weakening his kingside, Tal sees the importance of the e5 square.
1 comment
kv-ly (1268) on 05-Nov-08:
Aggressive. I would play that as well.
-
 
4... Qb6
Applying pressure on d4, and restricting white's dark squared bishop.

-
 
5. Nf3 Bg4 6. Be2 Nbd7
Logical development by both players.

-
 
7. e5
Tal tests the waters.

-
 
7... Nd5
Threatening to double white's pawns on the c file.

-
 
8. O-O
Tal is not too worried about his pawns stacking up, so he secures his king.

-
 
8... Nxc3 9. bxc3 e6
?! Sort of slow. 9...g6 was more aggressive.
2 comments
kv-ly (1268) on 05-Nov-08:
As black I would play Bxf3 and then dxe5 and e6.
charleshiggie (2014) on 21-Jul-09:
You are both wrong! 9....g6 allows 10. exd while Bxf3 needlessly surrenders the two bishops
-
 
10. Ng5
! Is it possible that Tal sees a mating combination on the kingside this early?

-
 
10... Bxe2 11. Qxe2 h6
?! In an attempt to kick out the knight, black creates a new weakness.

-
 
12. Nxf7
!! You must understand that chess was king (pardon the pun) in the former Soviet Union. This game was played before a big crowd of people. When Tal played 12. Nxf7, the place erupted. It got so loud in the hall that the arbiter threatened to kick out all of the spectators! Can you imagine being held "in contempt of court" at a chess match?
1 comment
firedoom (899) on 12-Oct-08:
In my opinion, a very nice move. It lures the king out during the beginning, so Tal can force the king to move until it can checkmate. It also weakens the kingside, forcing black to be unable to castle into safety.
-
 
12... Kxf7
Simagin takes the material advantage. Little did he know that his king was about to get very, very tired.

-
 
13. f5
Since white owns the f file, he attempts to open it up.

-
 
13... dxe5
?! It's tough to come up with anything better here. However, black is now officially in trouble.

-
 
14. fxe6+
Black has to take the pawn to save the knight. But the real surprise comes next. Can you spot it without looking ahead?

-
 
14... Kxe6 15. Rb1
!! WHAT??????????????????????????????? Tal is at -3 on material and he sacs a rook? A known lover of vodka, Tal may have seemed to his opponent to be totally drunk. Was this a total blunder? or a tactic so deep that only the Magician could see?

-
 

Pages: · 1 2 · next »