Chapter 277:
En Passant Grandmaster
"And with that, Japan's back in the game, but things will be tough. Nancy, care to recap what's happened over at board 1 since we last checked in?" Danny asked.
"Sure thing. We last left off on move 7. Ragnar had moved his queen to d3 while Okisato responded with e5. But now we're at move 14, and between now and then, the moves were as follows, queen's side castle, queen f7, king b1, b6, h3, knight e7, rook h2, knight d7, g4, bishop b7, g5, f5, g6, and h captures g6. But the real story is the eval bar," Nancy stated.
"Correct, Okisato now has the advantage, but it's the reverse over on board 3 for team Japan. This match could end in a draw."
Indeed Zago was on the ropes, but that was thanks in no small part to Köfun being aided from Ginji. Ragnar was on his own, but he was a grandmaster and evil genius in his own right with a rating of 2576 to boot.
"You think I've lost? Don't count me out. For trickery's the lesson of this game," Ragnar thought as he moved his knight to g5.
Okisato simply slid his queen to g8, but then Ragnar moved his pawn to f4, instead of f3, the best possible move he could make.
"Oh, one step too far," Danny frowned as Okisato castled queen's side.
"Now how about you do the explaining," Nancy nodded as Ragnar moved his rook to f2.
"Well, after that last move, f captures e4, knight ca[tures e4, and knight f5 are all likely. But what you'll notice is that White does not have a lot of places to move, while Black has more space. Oh, and lo and behold, my prediction was spot on. Knight g5 has also been played by Ragnar, but to illustrate my point, Okisato just played e4, meaning the queen's gotta move, probably to d2. And if you're busy moving your pieces to safety, you can't control the board."
Sure enough, Danny was right. With Ragnar running away, Okisato was able to focus on offense, moving his knight out to f6. Ragnar was also failing to make proper counterplay as his bishop to b5 ploy allowed for knight d5, essentially forcing rook e2 to keep Ragnar in the game. Now when f-knight captured e3, rook captured e3, knight captured e3, and queen captured e3. It was two knights for a rook, but Okisato was already ahead. And when you're ahead in chess, the strategy is to trade off pieces.
After Okisato moved his king to b8, Ragnar decided to move his bishop out from enemy lines to g4. "Nyahg, he's ticking me off! I'll have to cheat if I want to salvage this. But he just won't look away!" he thought as Okisato moved his pawn to d5.
Regardless, Ragnar had a scheme brewing. A dance of queens then commenced, consisting of queen d4, queen e7, queen d2, queen f6, and queen f2, being broken by Okisato moving his h-rook to e8. Ragnar moved his pawn to h4, hoping it could sneak by, but Okisato countered by pushing his own pawn to e3, sending Ragnar's queen packing to h2.
"Does he really think that h-pawn can do anything? I have two rooks on the back rank," Okisato thought as he moved his pawn to d4.
The move triggered a rook trade beginning with Ragnar capturing the pawn at d4 with his rook, Okisato capturing said rook with his rook, and Ragnar capturing said rook with his c-pawn. Okisato had the edge though as now he could play pawn to e2, forcing Ragnar to capture said pawn with his bishop to prevent the pawn from queening. Okisato countered by capturing the pawn at d4 with his queen, completely dominating the board.
"Oh no you don't!" Ragnar thought as he moved his knight to f3, and gaped in horror as said knight was promptly captured by Okisato's bishop. "Noooo... HAH!" he maliciously thought as he captured the bishop at f3 with his bishop.
"Check, it's the end for you," Okisato stated as he moved his rook to e1.
Indeed, it was now mate in 4, and Ragnar knew it too, but that's exactly why he went with this malicioys plan. "I go king a2, he goes queen c4. Then it's b3, queen c3 and I have a free move. No, I need to go bishop d1... only if I don't move my queen to f8! I just need to wait for him to look away, and I win!" Ragnar thought.
Indeed, once queen c3 was played, Ragnar held off on moving his bishop to d1, and even wrote "Qf8+" down on his notation sheet for his 39th move, even though the move wasn't possible. But in over the board chess, if the cheating wasn't spotted, the cheater was in the clear, and if he pulled off the illegal move, rook to e8 would be Okisato's only legal move, and following the queen capturing said rook, it was mate.
Okisato wasn't giving Ragnar the time of day though. Considering the position was not only lost for Ragnar, but essentially forced, Okisato found it oddly suspicious that Ragnar not only wasn't resigning, but appearing to stall for time. Though Okisato did glance towards board 3, and scowled at what he saw. Zago's position was completely lost.
"Ugh, if only that pawn was on a different square, he'd actually be winning, but that guy's two spaces away from queening."
Sensing his chance, Ragnar lunged for the queen as Okisato slowly turned back around.
"CHEATER!"
Ragnar froze, as Okisato turned his attention towards the source of the accusation. Standing behind board 3 in rage was Laura Amore.
"Ma'am, what do you mean by your accusation?" an arbiter asked.
"I saw the large man nudge his pawn a space forward before moving it! And that's not all, the man sitting over there is conveying moves to him!" Laura declared as she pointed at Ginji.
"Oi, oi, I'm from Team Japan. Thanks for trying to do us a solid, but our boy's losing fair n' square," Ginji sneered.
"Pull up the notes and replay the game!"
As a crowd began to form around board 3, Okisato directed his attention back to Ragnar. Thanks to Laura's outfburst, Ragnar had accidentally put his hand on his bishop, and since the touch-move rule was in effect, he had to move the bishop.
"No.... NO! That woman ruined everything!" Ragnar fumed as he moved his bishop to d1.
"Oh, so you were going to cheat. Well, you're losing anyway, so no use making a fuss over it," Okisato snarled as he captured the bishop at d1 with his rook.
"No, I'm number one. I'M NUMBER ONE! I can't lose!" Ragnar fumed as he moved his bishop to h5.
"No, you're not number one, unless it's number one loser. Checkmate, asshole," Okisato growled as he moved his rook to a1, winning the game.
Ragnar clutched his head with both hands and wallowed in agony at the sight. "No! I would have won if only I could have cheated!"
And speaking of cheating, Prokrutka arrived and after some deliberation, determined Köfun had in fact cheated to achieve a winning position and was thus handed a loss, meaning Japan had won the match against Iceland 3-1. Ginji was in the clear though as the argument there was no video recordings showing him flashing hints to the Icelandic team, but his actions had earned him Laura's ire.
"Why was she even back here anyway? I thought she went back. Well whatever. I'd better prepare my excuse for Oki-chwan," Ginji thought as he headed out.
The full game:
White: Ragnar Fúinn (2576) Black: Okisato Tanabe (2700)
1. Nf3 f6
2. e4 e6
3. Nc3 Bb4
4. a3 Bxc3
5. dxc3 Qe7
6. Be3 d6
7. Qd3 e5
8. O-O-O Qf7
9. Kb1 b6
10. h3 Ne7
11. Rh2 Nd7
12. g4 Bb7
13. g5 f5
14. g6 hxg6
15. Ng5 Qg8
16. f4 O-O-O
17. Rf2 fxe4
18. Nxe4 Nf5
19. Ng5 e4
20. Qd2 Nf6
21. Bb5 Nd5
22. Re2 Nfxe3
23. Rxe3 Nxe3
24. Qxe3 Kb8
25. Be2 Qe8
26. Bg4 d5
27. Qd4 Qe7
28. Qd2 Qf6
29. Qf2 Rhe8
30. h4 e3
31. Qh2 d4
32. Rxd4 Rxd4
33. cxd4 e2
34. Bxe2 Qxd4
35. Nf3 Bxf3
36. Bxf3 Re1+
37. Ka2 Qc4+
38. b3 Qc3
39. Bd1 Rxd1
40. h5 Ra1#
Match score:
Japan: 3 Iceland: 1
Japan wins 3-1
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