The Star Early Edition

MARK RUBERY CHESS

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In 1980 Efim Geller convincing­ly won the Soviet championsh­ip and followed this by a board prize at the European team championsh­ip. With one round to play at the Lone Pine tournament (then regarded as the strongest open tournament in the world) he was sharing the lead and had yet to concede a single loss and thus opined Tony Miles “With $10,000 at stake I figured he was due for one”.

A picture of these two gladiators shows Geller with his habitual cigarette and Miles with his glass of milk!

Miles,Anthony J (2545) - Geller,Efim P (2565) [A14]

Lone Pine Lone Pine (9), 1980

1.c4 e6 2.g3 d5 3.Bg2 Nf6 4.Nf3 Be7 5.b3

0–0 6.Bb2 (The double fianchetto was a favourite device Miles to avoid major theory and begin strategic trench warfare)…c5 7.0– 0 Nc6 8.e3 d4 9.exd4 cxd4 10.Re1 Re8 11.a3 a5 12.d3 Bc5 13.Nbd2 e5 14.Ng5

Bg4 15.Bf3! (Parting with this bishop might seem strange but it greatly improves White’s piece coordinati­on and gives good play on the light squares-Miles)…Bxf3 16.Qxf3 h6 17.Nge4 Nxe4 18.Nxe4 Bf8 19.Bc1 Re6 20.h4 Be7 21.h5 Qf8 22.Qf5 Rb8 23.g4 b5 24.Kh2 bxc4 25.bxc4 Rb3 26.Rg1 (Now g5 is coming with a bang-Miles)…Bxa3 27.Rxa3 Rxa3 28.Bxa3 Qxa3 29.g5 Qf8

30.Nf6+! (I remember while thinking of this move, glancing up at many spectators-I could almost read it in their eyes’ What on earth are you thinking about you idiot, isn’t obvious?’-Miles)…gxf6 31.gxh6+ Kh8 32.Rg7 Qxg7 33.hxg7+ Kxg7 34.Qg4+ Kh7 35.h6! (The point of the combinatio­n)… Kxh6 36.Qg8! (The queen gets into the heart of the position and Black’s structure collapses)…Re7 37.Qc8 Re6 38.Qh8+ 1–0

Tony Miles became a grandmaste­r at the age of twenty, achieving his final norm at a tournament in Dubna, in the Soviet Union-a barrier which yielded to only a few in those times. ‘If you are successful, please send us a telegram’, the Secretary of the British Chess Federation asked him before this trip. The telegram which arrived at the federation contained only one word: ‘Telegram’ and signified the arrival of the first British grandmaste­r and his particular brand of humour.

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