Chapter 265:
En Passant Grandmaster
Once the arbiters had the scoresheets, Mimosa ran off in tears. It was times like this where she'd need consoling, however, Alice was unable to do so as she herself was still playing. Since this was a team event, a win, loss, or draw could dictate the flow of the entire match, or at the very least, psychologically impact the teams playing.
"Taking a look at the other games, seems there's been some action since we last checked," Danny noted as he zoomed in on board 2.
"Yes, on this one we last left off at move 14, and since then, 10 turns have passed. Bishop e2, a-rook d8, king c1, f-rook e8, a3, bishop b6, rook d1, rook d6, king c2, bishop f5, check! Then bishop d3, bishop g4, rook e1, bishop captures f3, g captures f3, e-rook d8, bishop e4, knight captures d4, check, bishop captures d4, and bishop captures d4 is how we got to where we are now," Nancy stated.
"What's shocking is that the eval bar was the same when we last left, and just like before, I still don't see the winning lines. Do you, Nancy?"
Nancy shook her head, but as soon as Alice moved her e-rook to d1, it became clearer to see the reasoning behind the eval bar. And if that wasn't enough, g6, f4, rook e6, bishop f3, rook f6, bishop e4, and rook captures f4 made it all the more clear, Tenju was on the path to victory.
Both Collette and Fifi scowled as they got up to look at the game. Not only could they tell Alice was losing, but Alice herself knew it too. However, she couldn't give up as her team needed the win or at the very least a draw.
Winning was completely off the table barring no blunders from Tenju, meaning a draw was Alice's best bet of salvaging things. Though even with the hypothetical draw, things would still be tight.
After Mimoko moved her pawn to b5, the game between her and Collette had proceeded as follows, queen e1, rook e6, rook b1, queen a5, queen c1, rook c8, e4, d captures e4, f captures e4, knight captures e4, and queen f4. The eval bar now gave a much clearer advantage to Mimoko, which was bad for Collette as Mimoko was very good about holding advantages and converting them to wins. Not to mention, Mimoko had long since moved her knight to f6, meaning time was ticking down on Collette's clock as she watched the other games.
For this tournament, the time control was 90 minutes for the first 40 moves with 30 minutes being granted after the 40th move. An increment of 30 seconds per move was also in effect from the first move.
Collette was still 20 moves away from making the time control, and her time was getting shorter by the second. Fifi was also eating up time on the clock, but had a more stable position and was only 10 moves away from the time control, much like Alice was about to be after she moved her pawn to f3.
Tenju responded with king g7, which was not the best move, but it didn't do much to change the nearly all black eval bar in her favor. Alice quickly captured the pawn at b7 with her bishop, hoping it would generate counterplay, but instead it opened up the door for rook b8, which was a whole bundle of nasty.
"Just look at this, the bishop has b2 guarded, so if the bishop moves, in comes a nasty check, and if she doesn't move the bishop, it's gone," Danny stated.
Sure enough, bishop d5 was played allowing the devastating rook captures b2 check.
Alice began to tremble as she moved her king to d3. "No, I'm gonna bring the team down. I can't lose to Tenju either, not after what I said, it will be disastrous!" Alice thought as she moved her king to d3.
Tenju wasn't showing any mercy though and moved her rook to b5, sending the bishop fleeing to c4. Tenju simply moved her b-rook to f5, prompting Alice to finally move her a-rook to b1. But it had been activated far too late to do anything. For after Tenju moved her bishop to f6, her position was both aesthetically pleasing and completely winning.
Alice desperately moved her rook to f1, but Tenju countered with rook d4, check, sending the king to c3. Rook c5 came next, completely subduing the bishop at c4. Now it was only a matter of time before mate.
"Looks like it won't really matter if they hit 40 moves, this game looks finished," Danny declared as Alice moved her rook to b4.
"Yes, especially after that last move. Now if a5 is played... and it just was, that rook has got to go back, for if it goes to a4, d-rook captures c4 and that's a double check and a lost rook," Nancy stated.
Alice didn't make that blunder though, instead she made an even bigger one and moved her b-rook to b1, stunning the commentators.
"Th- The eval bar... Mate in 6! Hold on, ...hmm ...I see it! Oh, that's nasty. Do you think Alice realizes she just blundered!?"
"No, Danny, but Tenju certainly did as c-rook captures c4 has been played, and that's the pathway to mate!" Nancy declared.
Alice however, didn't see the oncoming mate and moved her king to b3. She could however sense things were bad for her.
"Check," Tenju stated as she moved her pawn to a4, prompting Alice to move her king to a2. "Hmm, it's almost over. Taira, don't rest just yet," she thought as she moved her rook to d2.
Alice began to sweat buckets as she moved her rook to b2. Now it was becoming clearer to her mate was inevitable. "No, no, no! I can't lose. Mimosa already got walloped. If I go down, a draw's the best we can get, but I can't tell if Collette and Fifi are winning or not! No, NO!" she thought as Tenju captured the rook at b2 with her rook, forcing the king to a1.
Tenju then performed a nasty check, simply by sliding her rook down a space to b3 as if she was sliding a switch down, opening the diagonals and leaving the king with just a2 as it's only legal move. Thanks to passing 40 moves, 30 minutes would be added to the clock, meaning if Alice refused to move or resign, she'd have to wait nearly 45 minutes to lose on time.
With tears flooding out of her eyes and her hand trembling, she chose to move her king to a2.
"Checkmate," Tenju declared as she moved her rook to c2, winning the game.
Alice sunk her head into her hands and cried, barely mustering the will to hand her score sheet to the arbiter before running away, presumably to where ever Mimosa was currently curled up crying at.
Now it was impossible for France to win the match, as with Japan leading 2-0, a draw was the best they could hope for, but only if both Collette and Fifi won their games, which would be easier said than done.
The full game:
White: Alice Utsugi (2442) Black: Tenju Kuroshiro (2222)
1. e4 e6
2. d4 d5
3. exd5 exd5
4. Nf3 Bd6
5. c4 Nf6
6. Qe2+ Be7
7. Nc3 O-O
8. Nxd5 Nxd5
9. cxd5 Bb4+
10. Kd1 Qxd5
11. Qc4 Qa5
12. Qb5 Bg4
13. Qxa5 Bxa5
14. Be3 Nc6
15. Be2 Rad8
16. Kc1 Rfe8
17. a3 Bb6
18. Rd1 Rd6
19. Kc2 Bf5+
20. Bd3 Bg4
21. Re1 Bxf3
22. gxf3 Red8
23. Be4 Nxd4+
24. Bxd4 Bxd4
25. Red1 g6
26. f4 Re6
27. Bf3 Rf6
28. Be4 Rxf4
29. f3 Kg7
30. Bxb7 Rb8
31. Bd5 Rxb2+
32. Kd3 Rb5
33. Bc4 Rbf5
34. Rab1 Bf6
35. Rf1 Rd4+
36. Kc3 Rc5
37. Rb4 a5
38. Rbb1 Rcxc4+
39. Kb3 a4+
40. Ka2 Rd2+
41. Rb2 Rxb2+
42. Ka1 Rb3+
43. Ka2 Rc2#
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