I get frenched:
White: cest moi
Black: ocarrasco (please dont tell me thats the nom de chess of someone else at CFC.
1. e4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. e5 c5 4. c3 Nc6 5. Nf3 Qb6 6. a3 Bd7 Book. Nothing to see, here.
7. b4 cxb4 8. axb4 Nge7 Wasnt explicitly in my book, but strongly implied, so I dont think I was off, just yet.
9. Na3 Ng6 10. Bd3 Be7 11. Bg5 Bxg5 By this point, I should have castled. I put it off, thinking I should aggressively push the attack, but in retrospect, I fail to see how these moves were accomplishing much in my favor. And 10. Bd3 was just slavishly following an idea that lost all benefit after 6. Bd7.
12. Nxg5 Nxb4 Oops!
Just lost a pawn, and having foolishly thrown away my black bishop, if I try taking the knight, Ill lose at least two more pawns and the ability to castle. I let it go . . . but not to castle.
13. Rb1 Nxd3+ 14. Qxd3 Qa5 15. Ra1 Rc8 My, havent I accomplished a lot in those moves?
16. O-O Rxc3 17. Nc2 Qxa1 18. Rxa1 Rxd3Finally get the king out of the way . . . at what cost?? From here, its pretty much downhill: down a rook and two pawns against a player who isnt making mistakes.
19. Nf3 a6 20. Nfe1 Rc3 21. Rb1 Rc7 He extricates his rook and covers his unblocked pawns. My opponent sends me a message: decista logo sera menos doloroso pra vc !!!!!!!!
I dont read Portuguese, but Ill attempt by own free-hand translation: stop [decista] this foolishness, you pathetic [doloroso] fool; please resign, like a decent human-being, so I can devote my time to playing someone more competent!!!!!!
Not sure I have much of a defense to that charge, except that (a) I like to play games through to the very end (or at least to the point where one can say M3 or some such; i.e., where it is indisputably inevitable); and (b) I need practice engineering a draw from a losing situation. Comments are welcome on appropriate etiquette for this situation: was I a jerk for drawing this out?
22. g3 O-O Oh, goody! Here comes the other rook.
Abandon hope all ye . . . .
23. Nb4 Rfc8 24. Ned3 Bb5 25. Nc5 Seemed like a good idea at the time. Clearly hadnt learned my lesson about one pawn being stretched too thin when called upon to defend two different points, a lesson my opponent understands all too well:
25. Nxe5 26. Kg2 Rxc5 27. dxc5 Rxc5When youre so far ahead in material, why not?
28. Rd1 My only hope/excuse? Just maybe hell make a mistake and let me breakthrough on the d-file, and I could still mate with just the rook.
28. f6Nope. Apparently, his mother did birth any fools.
29. f4 Ng4 30. Re1 a5 31. h3 Nh6 32. Nxd5 Bc6 33. Kf2 Bxd5 34. g4 b5 35. f5 Rc2+ 36. Kg3 Rg2+ 37. Kf4 e5+ 38. Ke3 Nxg4+ 39. hxg4 Rxg4 40. Rd1 Re4+
41. Kf2 Rd4 42. Rc1 Bc4 43. Ke1 a4 44. Rb1 a3 Even I cant take it any more: 0-1
Lessons learned: (1) watch that one-pawn-defending-two-points thing; again, its something a basic player overlooks. (Well, of course that one is protected: see that pawn, there?); (2) while one neednt [/i]rush[/i] to castle, if you wait for the second or third sign of trouble, instead of the first, youll probably pay more for the privilege.
White: cest moi
Black: ocarrasco (please dont tell me thats the nom de chess of someone else at CFC.

1. e4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. e5 c5 4. c3 Nc6 5. Nf3 Qb6 6. a3 Bd7 Book. Nothing to see, here.
7. b4 cxb4 8. axb4 Nge7 Wasnt explicitly in my book, but strongly implied, so I dont think I was off, just yet.
9. Na3 Ng6 10. Bd3 Be7 11. Bg5 Bxg5 By this point, I should have castled. I put it off, thinking I should aggressively push the attack, but in retrospect, I fail to see how these moves were accomplishing much in my favor. And 10. Bd3 was just slavishly following an idea that lost all benefit after 6. Bd7.
12. Nxg5 Nxb4 Oops!

13. Rb1 Nxd3+ 14. Qxd3 Qa5 15. Ra1 Rc8 My, havent I accomplished a lot in those moves?

16. O-O Rxc3 17. Nc2 Qxa1 18. Rxa1 Rxd3Finally get the king out of the way . . . at what cost?? From here, its pretty much downhill: down a rook and two pawns against a player who isnt making mistakes.
19. Nf3 a6 20. Nfe1 Rc3 21. Rb1 Rc7 He extricates his rook and covers his unblocked pawns. My opponent sends me a message: decista logo sera menos doloroso pra vc !!!!!!!!
I dont read Portuguese, but Ill attempt by own free-hand translation: stop [decista] this foolishness, you pathetic [doloroso] fool; please resign, like a decent human-being, so I can devote my time to playing someone more competent!!!!!!
Not sure I have much of a defense to that charge, except that (a) I like to play games through to the very end (or at least to the point where one can say M3 or some such; i.e., where it is indisputably inevitable); and (b) I need practice engineering a draw from a losing situation. Comments are welcome on appropriate etiquette for this situation: was I a jerk for drawing this out?
22. g3 O-O Oh, goody! Here comes the other rook.

23. Nb4 Rfc8 24. Ned3 Bb5 25. Nc5 Seemed like a good idea at the time. Clearly hadnt learned my lesson about one pawn being stretched too thin when called upon to defend two different points, a lesson my opponent understands all too well:
25. Nxe5 26. Kg2 Rxc5 27. dxc5 Rxc5When youre so far ahead in material, why not?
28. Rd1 My only hope/excuse? Just maybe hell make a mistake and let me breakthrough on the d-file, and I could still mate with just the rook.
28. f6Nope. Apparently, his mother did birth any fools.
29. f4 Ng4 30. Re1 a5 31. h3 Nh6 32. Nxd5 Bc6 33. Kf2 Bxd5 34. g4 b5 35. f5 Rc2+ 36. Kg3 Rg2+ 37. Kf4 e5+ 38. Ke3 Nxg4+ 39. hxg4 Rxg4 40. Rd1 Re4+
41. Kf2 Rd4 42. Rc1 Bc4 43. Ke1 a4 44. Rb1 a3 Even I cant take it any more: 0-1
Lessons learned: (1) watch that one-pawn-defending-two-points thing; again, its something a basic player overlooks. (Well, of course that one is protected: see that pawn, there?); (2) while one neednt [/i]rush[/i] to castle, if you wait for the second or third sign of trouble, instead of the first, youll probably pay more for the privilege.