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Bournemouth Junior Chess Club

Easter Saturday – 5 April 2026


We were happy and pleased to receive 13 juniors on Easter Saturday — a good turnout considering the holidays. These juniors love to come and play chess.

Small Easter eggs were handed to all to celebrate the occasion — a lovely treat for a session well played!


1st Session

Tony gave a simultaneous display against Peter, Nathaniel and Harvey. They all did well and draws were achieved by Peter and Nathaniel — a fine result against an experienced coach.

Eric had a game with Neil, who took advantage of a poor move by yours truly to play very soundly and win a good game. Well done Neil!

Steve went through the basics with Atlas, who then went on to play Milan — a much stronger player. We hope this will give Atlas good experience and a positive learning curve.

Graham set out some puzzles for the intermediate group and went through a classic GM game by Alekhine — see the lesson section below.


2nd Session

The 2nd session lesson was taken by Graham and Steve, who advised Mariusz on some tactics which I am sure he will learn from and build on in the weeks ahead.


Results – Easter Saturday

Ladder Board points were given to Neil, Peter, Nathaniel and Harvey, who all played games against coaches.

Other Results

Milan 1 – Atlas 0 / Pavina 1 – Kit 0 / Koko 0 – Nilay 1 / Jake 1 – Manvik 0

Mariusz was also given points for doing well with Steve.


Ladder Board – Winter Term (Jan / Feb / Mar)

1 point = Win  |  0.5 points = Draw  |  0 points = Loss

1st Session – Advanced

NamePlayedWDLTotal
Peter84225
Nicolas66006
Nathaniel73404.5
Rafan50140.5
Kautam63134
Neil94144.5
Hektor63033
Harvey92253

1st Session – Intermediate

NamePlayedWDLTotal
Nirvan74034
Markas64114.5
Pavina81161.5
Kit96036
Sarah21011
Milan42022
Jack54014

1st Session – Beginners

NamePlayedWDLTotal
Erin62042
Omer74124.5
Atlas84134
Arini81252
Amaury31021

2nd Session – Intermediate / Beginners

NamePlayedWDLTotal
Nilay94235
Manvik103354.5
Teo53023
Koko72142.5
Jake83234
William54104.5
Sonny10110.5
Mariusz61232

Graham’s Lesson: Alekhine’s Gun

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Alexander Alekhine vs Aron Nimzowitsch – San Remo, 1930
French Defence, Winawer Variation

This game is one of the most celebrated positional masterpieces in chess history. Alekhine demonstrates the concept now known as Alekhine’s Gun — the devastating stacking of two rooks and the queen on a single open file. The result was total positional domination, leaving Nimzowitsch completely without good moves.

Annotated Game

#WhiteBlackCommentary
1e4e6French Defence — Black stakes out the centre indirectly.
2d4d5The solid French pawn chain begins.
3Nc3Bb4Winawer Variation — Black pins the knight, aiming to double White’s pawns.
4e5c5White advances and closes the centre. Black immediately counter-attacks d4.
5Bd2Ne7Why can’t Black simply play 5…cxd4? Because after 6.Qg4, Black faces immediate kingside pressure before completing development.
6Nb5Bxd2+White threatens Nd6. Black exchanges the bishop to relieve the pin.
7Qxd2O-OBlack castles to safety.
8c3b6What’s wrong with 8…Nd6? After 9.f4 Nf5 10.Nf3, White has a powerful centre. Black plays b6 to prepare …Ba6, targeting the b5 knight.
9f4Ba6Alekhine prepares the kingside advance. The bishop targets the b5 knight.
10Nf3Qd7Both sides develop.
11a4Nbc6White grabs queenside space — part of a long-term plan.
12b4cxb4Alekhine opens the c-file — the key strategic plan of the whole game.
13cxb4Bb7The c-file is now open. White’s rooks will soon stack on it.
14Nd6f5White’s knight is a superb outpost on d6. Black tries to limit the f-pawn.
15a5Nc8Black is being squeezed on both wings and is running out of good moves.
16Nxb7Qxb7White removes Black’s light-squared bishop, further weakening the c6 square.
17a6Qf7White gains tempo, chasing the queen away and fixing the a6 pawn as a permanent weakness.
18Bb5N8e7Chasing the Black queen away once more.
19O-Oh6White finally castles. Black plays a waiting move — there is no good plan.
20Rfc1Rfc8White begins the c-file occupation.
21Rc2Qe8The second rook prepares to join the c-file.
22Rac1Rab8White now applies maximum pressure on the c-file.
23Qe3Rc7Preparing to play Qc1 and complete Alekhine’s Gun.
24Rc3Qd7White stacks the third piece on the c-file.
25R1c2Kf8Alekhine’s Gun! The queen and two rooks are stacked on the c-file (Qe3 / Rc3 / Rc2). White has a decisive advantage.
26Qc1Rbc8The full battery is complete: Qc1 / Rc2 / Rc3. Black has no adequate defence.
27Ba4b5b5 cannot be prevented — Black is desperate for counterplay.
28Bxb5Ke8White wins the pawn. Black’s king flees towards the centre.
29Ba4Kd8The bishop returns. Black’s king is cornered and out of moves.
30h41-0Black has no moves. A complete positional masterpiece — Nimzowitsch resigns.

Key Concept: Alekhine’s Gun

Alekhine’s Gun is the powerful formation of two rooks stacked on an open file with the queen behind them. After move 25 in this game, Alekhine had achieved Rc3 + Rc2 + Qc1 on the c-file — an irresistible battery that Black could not hope to defend against. Look out for opportunities to open a file and stack your pieces. This game shows exactly how it is done at the very highest level.


We look forward to seeing you all plus others returning from holidays next Saturday!

ERIC SACHS

Bournemouth Junior Chess Club – Where Young Minds Learn to Think Ahead.