News

Bournemouth Junior Chess Club

Update – 28 March 2026

Approaching the Easter holidays, we had 21 young chess players come along to learn and play chess.

Kautam, who has been coming for a couple of years and has improved greatly in the advanced section, played his last game as he is moving to Brunei. We wish him and his family well and are sure he will continue his chess journey.

Farewell Kautam – we’ll miss you!

Just a reminder to all parents that we will be continuing the club through the Easter holidays and April will be a 4-week month.

Our senior and intermediate coaches have asked all players to let us know the areas of chess they wish to improve on. Examples are different openings, middle game tactics, how to plan an attack, and end game tactics. We try to accommodate all and this is the way to progress – plug the gaps that will make the difference between winning/drawing and losing. We would love all feedback on this, please!


? Tony’s Advanced Session

In the advanced section Tony’s session comprised three elements.

The second element was a continued study of rook vs pawn endgames.

Thirdly, finding strategic ideas in two games.


♟️ Graham’s Intermediate Session – Petrosian vs Pachman, Bled 1961

Graham analysed a famous game with both intermediate groups this week. You can play through the full game below:

Loading chess game…

Here are Graham’s teaching notes on the game, move by move:

MoveWhite (Petrosian)Black (Pachman)Notes for Students
1Nf3c5
2g3Nc6
3Bg2g6
40-0Bg7What is this opening called? Ans: King’s Indian Attack
5d3e6
6e4Nge7
7Re10-0
8e5d6Why did White play e5? To gain space and restrict Black’s pieces.
9exd6 (pxp)Qxd6Best move for Black after 4…Bg7?
10Nbd2Qc7Why did Black play Qc7? To remove the queen from the open d-file and avoid further attack.
11Nb3Nd4
12Bf4Qb6Attacking the queen.
13Ne5NxNe5
14Nc4Qb5Zwischenzug (in-between move) – attacking the queen and gaining a tempo.
15axb5 (apxN)a5
16Bd6Bf6
17Qf3Kg7
18Re4Rd8Why does White play Re4? To swing the rook across to attack – the classic rook lift.
19QxBf6+ (Queen Sac)KxQA stunning queen sacrifice!
20Be5+Kg5
21Bg7ResignsWhy does White play Bg7? To create a mating net. Why does Black resign? It is checkmate all ways!

? Puzzles

Graham also set the groups three puzzles to solve. Can you find the best moves?

 Black to Play & Win

Black to play and Win

White to play and win


? Beginners & Other Sessions

Steve concentrated on the beginners – Amaury, Oman, Atlas and Arini – and Eric went through a game with Milan, who is showing real promise.

Session Photos

In the 2nd session, lessons were repeated by Graham with the Intermediates and it was good to welcome Sonny for his 2nd session. Eric went through end game tactics with Mariusz, who showed good understanding.


? Ladder Board Results – 28 March 2026

1st Session

Harvey 0 – 1 Peter  |  Neil 0 – 1 Nicolas  |  Kautam 1 – 0 Hektor  |  Nathaniel ½ – ½ Coach  |  Kit 0 – 1 Markas  |  Milan 1 – 0 Pavina  |  Atlas 1 – 0 Amaury  |  Arini 0 – 1 Omer

2nd Session

Manvik 1 – 0 Nilay  |  Coach ½ – ½ William  |  Mariusz 0 – 1 Koko  |  Sonny ½ – ½ Coach


? Ladder Board Tables – Winter Term (Jan/Feb/March)

1 point = a win · 0.5 = a draw · 0 = a loss

1st Session – Advanced

NamePlayedWDLTotal
Nicolas66006.0
Peter74124.5
Nathaniel63304.5
Kautam63134.0
Neil83143.5
Hektor63033.0
Harvey82152.5
Rafan50140.5

1st Session – Intermediate

NamePlayedWDLTotal
Kit86026.0
Markas64114.5
Nirvan74034.0
Jack54014.0
Milan31021.0
Sarah21011.0
Pavina70160.5

1st Session – Beginners

NamePlayedWDLTotal
Omer74114.5
Atlas74124.0
Erin62042.0
Arini81252.0
Amaury31021.0

2nd Session – Intermediate/Beginners

NamePlayedWDLTotal
Manvik93344.5
William54104.5
Nilay83234.0
Teo53023.0
Jake72233.0
Koko62132.5
Mariusz51131.5
Sonny10110.5

Many thanks to our coaches Steve, Tony and Graham for making all this possible. See you all next Saturday and Happy Easter! ?

Eric Sachs