Adams – Kasparov I don’t always play the King’s Indian. Against young star Michael Adams I decided to play in a more classical style. Adams Kasparov Result: 0-1 Metadata » Click to open. Date: 1992.??.?? Location: ? Tournament: Dortmund Round: Opening: Submitted by: Published on: February 9, 2020 Tags: Kasparov, chess, chess games, Michael Adams [Event "Dortmund"] [Site "?"] [Date "1992.??.??"] [Round "?"] [White "Adams"] [Black "Kasparov"] [Result "0-1"] [PlyCount "52"] 1.d4 d5 {I don't always play the King's Indian. Against young star Michael Adams I decided to play in a more classical style.} 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 c6 4.e3 Nf6 5.Nf3 Nbd7 6.Qc2 Bd6 {I am just developing sensibly. Now Adams goes wild.} 7.g4 {Another young star, Shirov has played this move, and I was not caught by surprise. Classical wisdom holds that such flank actions should be met by a reaction in the center.} dxc4 {Now this was a new move, so now Adams was on his own, and he immediately loses his way.} 8.e4 {8.Bxc4 b5 9.Be2 b4 10.Na4 Bb7 11.g5 Nd5 12. Bd2 c5 13.Nxc5 Bxc5 14.dxc5 Rc8 I have good counterplay here.} e5 9.g5 exd4 10.Nxd4 Ng4 {I have the initiative here, and that means that White has mishandled the opening.} 11.h3 {11.Nf5 Nde5 12.Nxg7+ Kf8 13.Nh5 Nf3+ 14. Ke2 Ngxh2 My bishop will slide to g4 with great effect!} Nge5 12.Be3 {12.f4 Bc5 13.Nf5 Nf3+ 14.Ke2 Nd4+} Nc5 13.O-O-O {Castling is not going to solve White's problems. The twin horses dominate the center of the board.} Ned3+ 14.Kb1 Qe7 {The e-pawn is hard to defend.} 15.Rg1 g6 {I'll castle soon, but I wanted to stop any attempt at counterplay, and so I bring the f5-square under control.} 16.Bg2 O-O 17.Ka1 {Not a good move, but White was in big trouble anyway.} Bf4 18.Bxf4 Nxf4 19.h4 Rd8 20.Qd2 Ncd3 21.Qe3 Bg4 {White's forces are completely uncoordinated.} 22.Rd2 Qe5 {Adams resigned . He realized what would happen if he played 23.Nc2. Do you? If not Gambit can display the final combination, but try to find it yourself first.} 23.Nc2 Nxb2 24.Kxb2 Rd3 25.Rxd3 Nxd3+ 26.Kb1 Qxc3 0-1 [Event "Dortmund"] [Site "?"] [Date "1992.??.??"] [Round "?"] [White "Adams"] [Black "Kasparov"] [Result "0-1"] [PlyCount "52"] 1.d4 d5 {I don't always play the King's Indian. Against young star Michael Adams I decided to play in a more classical style.} 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 c6 4.e3 Nf6 5.Nf3 Nbd7 6.Qc2 Bd6 {I am just developing sensibly. Now Adams goes wild.} 7.g4 {Another young star, Shirov has played this move, and I was not caught by surprise. Classical wisdom holds that such flank actions should be met by a reaction in the center.} dxc4 {Now this was a new move, so now Adams was on his own, and he immediately loses his way.} 8.e4 {8.Bxc4 b5 9.Be2 b4 10.Na4 Bb7 11.g5 Nd5 12. Bd2 c5 13.Nxc5 Bxc5 14.dxc5 Rc8 I have good counterplay here.} e5 9.g5 exd4 10.Nxd4 Ng4 {I have the initiative here, and that means that White has mishandled the opening.} 11.h3 {11.Nf5 Nde5 12.Nxg7+ Kf8 13.Nh5 Nf3+ 14. Ke2 Ngxh2 My bishop will slide to g4 with great effect!} Nge5 12.Be3 {12.f4 Bc5 13.Nf5 Nf3+ 14.Ke2 Nd4+} Nc5 13.O-O-O {Castling is not going to solve White's problems. The twin horses dominate the center of the board.} Ned3+ 14.Kb1 Qe7 {The e-pawn is hard to defend.} 15.Rg1 g6 {I'll castle soon, but I wanted to stop any attempt at counterplay, and so I bring the f5-square under control.} 16.Bg2 O-O 17.Ka1 {Not a good move, but White was in big trouble anyway.} Bf4 18.Bxf4 Nxf4 19.h4 Rd8 20.Qd2 Ncd3 21.Qe3 Bg4 {White's forces are completely uncoordinated.} 22.Rd2 Qe5 {Adams resigned . He realized what would happen if he played 23.Nc2. Do you? If not Gambit can display the final combination, but try to find it yourself first.} 23.Nc2 Nxb2 24.Kxb2 Rd3 25.Rxd3 Nxd3+ 26.Kb1 Qxc3 0-1 White to move: find the best move... click the ? for the solution Black to move: find the best move... click the ? for the solution Warning: This game can only be seen if JavaScript is enabled in your browser. No related posts.