EXAMPLES OF ANNOTATION
EXAMPLE 1: A GAME BETWEEN WEIBEL'S TWO TOP PLAYERS:
Fritz11 Printout, Oliver Wu, 10/28/2014 1
A10
Surapeneni,Atri 1600
Wu,Oliver 1822
Weibel Chess Team Game (3) 24.10.2014
[Oliver Wu]
1.c4 f5 2.Nc3 Nf6 3.Nf3 g6 4.g3
Bg7 5.Bg2 d6 So far, this is a
Lennigrad Dutch transposed from an
English. 6.Qc2 Already a mistake. Atri is
trying to take control of the center from
the side, which is not a very good plan.
e5 This is what black is aiming for. The
person with black (I) wants to have a
strong center, and then attack the
kingside. 7.d3 0-0 8.Bd2 c6 9.0-0
Qe8 10.Rad1 I don't know what white is
doing, but I am now going to play h6,g5,
Qg6,Nh5, and try o mate the king by
starting with f4.
h6 11.Rfe1 g5 12.Rf1 Qg6 13.Qb3
Nbd7 14.d4 e4 White is trying to get
counterplay on the queenside, but it is
too slow because he strated too late.
15.Ne1 Nh5 16.d5 Nc5 17.Qc2 Re8
18.b4 Now, white has finally started to
launch an attack on the queenside, but I
am almost breaking through on the
kingside. Again, Atri is too slow.
Nd7 19.Qb3 f4 20.g4 Nhf6 21.h3 h5
22.gxh5 Qxh5 Now, my attack will
break through after g4 and after Hxg4
Nxg4 and Qh2#.
23.Qc2 Qh7 24.f3 e3 Now, I gave up
my attack to have a winnning position
because of the boxed in pieces on the
kingside.
25.Qxh7+ Kxh7 26.Bc1 Nb6 27.dxc6
Nxc4 28.cxb7 Better was C7, though it
loses a pawn, but at least gives Atri
some time to develop his pieces on the
kingside.
Bxb7 29.Nb5 Red8 30.Nc7 Rac8
31.Ne6 Re8 32.Nxg5+ At first I thought
that he was going to go Nxg7, but when
he did this, I knew that I could trade my
useless bishop on g7 for the great
knight.
Kg6 33.h4 Bh6 34.Nd3 Bxg5
35.hxg5 Kxg5 Now , though the
material is equal, I have much more
active pieces including the king, that
might start a mating attack on the
kingside.
36.Nb2 d5 37.Nxc4 Rxc4 38.a3 Nh5
39.Bh3 Ng3 My knight is a monster,
and white now has no chance of survival.
40.Rfe1 Rc2 41.Bd7 Rd8 42.Ba4
Rxe2 43.Rxe2 Nxe2+ The rest of the
game is over because of Nc3 winning a
piece.
44.Kf1 Nc3 45.Rd3 Nxa4 46.Bxe3
Ba6 47.Bxf4+ Kxf4 48.Ke2 Nb2
Atri ran out of time.
0-1
EXAMPLE 2: A GAME BETWEEN TWO JUNIOR VARSITY PLAYERS:
(15) Jain,Prisha - Arin,775 [B01]
Weibel Friday , 15.11.2014
[Jain,PRISHA]
1.e4 e5
To Challenge the Center
2.Nf3 Nc6
To attack the Pawn
3.d4 d5
To attack e4 with the pawn
4.exd5 Qxd5
To attack the knight and get a pawn
5.Nc3 Qd6
To develop my knight and attack the queen
6.Bb5 Bd7
To pint he knight and do Nxe5 or dxe5 next
7.Bxc6 Bxc6
To get rid of the knight and do Nxe5 or dxe5 next
8.Nxe5 Bxg2
To get a free pawn and get my knight in the center
9.Rg1 Bh3
To move my rook away and attack Bishop
10.Nb5 Qb6
To attack the queen
11.Qe2 0–0–0
To protect my knight on b5 and get ready for discovered check
12.Nxf7 Rd7
To fork the rooks
13.Qe8+ Rd8
To do checkmate in one move Rd8, Qxd8#
14.Qxd8#
1–0
EXAMPLE 3: A GAME BETWEEN TWO SOLID WEIBEL VARSITY PLAYERS
Louis Law 1212 (White) vs Eshaan Mistry 1156 (Black)
11/17/14 {Eshaan Mistry}
1.d4 d5 2.c4 Nf6 3.Nc3 Bf5 4.Nf3 Nc6 { I didn't really have to move that because the knight and queen is already protecting the pawn } 5.Bf4 e6 6.e3 Bd6 7.Bg5 Be7 8.Qb3 Bb4 { I am wasting tempo by moving the bishop again and again } 9.a3 Ba5 10.Qxb7 { lost a pawn. i couldnt do anything about it } 10...Ne7 11.Qb5+ c6 12.Qa4 O-O { bad . first i should have moved the knight out of the way } 13.b4 Bc7 14.Bxf6 gxf6 { now my king is open. but his pieces are onthe other side so he cannot attack me } 15.Be2 Qd7 16.O-O Ng6 17.Qb3 Rab8 18.Rfe1 { no use bec ause it isnt threatening anything } 18...a5 { puting pressure } 19.Na2 axb4 { should have done Bd6 instead because it puts more pressure } 20.axb4 Ba5 { he can just move away } 21.Qc3 Bc7 { losing tempo by moving it agan } 22.Bd3 Bg4 23.Be2 f5 24.h3 Bxf3 25.Bxf3 Nh4 26.cxd5 Nxf3+ 27.gxf3 { open king. now we can attack each other on our kings } 27...exd5 28.e4 Rbe8 29.exd5 Qxd5 30.Rxe8 Rxe8 31.Kg2 Qd6 32.Rh1 Qg6+ 33.Kf1 Qe6 34.Rg1+ Kf8 35.Kg2 Qg6+ 36.Kh1 Qh5 { eventually we drew by forced 3 move repetition }