Chess: The strange case of the postal poisoned pawn

William Hartston
Monday 12 July 1993 23:02 BST
Comments

REAL men play international correspondence chess. Not for them the quick thrills of a six-hour tournament game, when they can savour the joy or torment of a postcard on the mat, each move weighed down with the results of days of mental effort.

I was put off postal chess when the Dane Jorn Sloth (a curiously appropriate name for a postal player) told me that he was about to win the world championship. 'I have a winning rook and pawn endgame,' he said, 'but it will take another 18 moves to force the win and play has slowed down to about one move a month.'

I know the misery of defending a lost game. The thought of having to suffer it for 18 months told me that I do not have the emotional constitution required for postal play. Today's game, from a recent international match between the Czech Republic and the Ukraine, was a real quickie, probably over in less than a year.

Generally it is risky to play a sharp opening by correspondence. The theory can change while your move is in the post, but here White introduces an extraordinary sacrifice in a position studied to death in the 1970s.

In the 'Poisoned Pawn' variation of the Sicilian Defence, Fischer's 12 . . . Qa5 practically put 10. e5 out of business in grandmaster play. White usually continued 13. 0-0, but if Black avoided any unpleasant sacrifices on e6, his defences seemed to hold.

In this game, Manduch played the sacrifice before castling. Rarely do you see such a violent move as 13. Bxe6 followed by as quiet development as 0-0 and Kh1.

The first point was that after 13 . . . Qxe5+, White was ready with 14. Kd1] fxe6 15. Re1. The second point came with the move 17. Ne4] Black cannot take the queen without allowing Nd6 mate.

Playing 17 . . . Ndxe5, Black must have analysed that 18. Nd6+ Kd7 was not dangerous for him, but he missed the strength of 18. Qd6] After 18 . . . Qd5 White can win simply with 19. Rad1 Qxd6 20. Nxd6+ Kd7 21. Nf7+, so Black decided to chase the queen away with 18 . . . Nf7.

Then came 19. Rxb7]] and it was all over. Nxd6 is met by 20. Nxd6 mate, and Bxb7 by 20. Qxe6+ and mate next move. Meanwhile, White threatens Re7+ and there is no defence.

----------------------------------------------------------------- White: M Manduch Black: V Kashlyuk ----------------------------------------------------------------- 1 e4 c5 11 fxe5 Nfd7 2 Nf3 d6 12 Bc4 Qa5 3 d4 cxd4 13 Bxe6 fxe6 4 Nxd4 Nf6 14 0-0 Bc5 5 Nc3 a6 15 Kh1 Bxd4 6 Bg5 e6 16 Qxd4 Nc6 7 f4 Qb6 17 Ne4 Ndxe5 8 Qd2 Qxb2 18 Qd6 Nf7 9 Rb1 Qa3 19 Rxb7 1-0 10 e5 dxe5 -----------------------------------------------------------------

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in