Bournemouth Junior Chess Newsletter

Published by Eric Sachs on

17 January 2026


We welcomed another newcomer yesterday Atlos and was pleased to see Esila and Jake return as regulars. Our hardcore of regulars were keen and enthusiastic as ever and both sessions were enjoyable and some good chess was played.

Highlights

  • 22 Juniors in total
  • Tony went through a series of end games puzzles with the advanced players
  • All were encouraged to enter into the Dorset chess event next Saturday in the under 1600 section
  • Graham reviewed a game and technique of creating the open file by Aaron Nimzowitch — see details of game and report by Graham. This was very well received.

Photo Gallery


Game Report: Aron Nimzowitsch – “Take the Open File!”

Graham reviewed a game and technique of creating the open file by Aron Nimzowitsch. This was very well received by our advanced players.

About Aron Nimzowitsch

Full name: Aron Nimzowitsch
Life: November 7, 1886 – March 16, 1935 (age 48)
Place of birth: Riga, Russian Empire (now Latvia), lived in Denmark

Aron Nimzowitsch was a Latvian-Danish chess player best known for his 1925 book, My System, which features his approach to chess that became part of a philosophy known as hypermodernism. Nimzowitsch was one of the best players of any style in the 1920s and early 1930s.

Nimzowitsch is best remembered for having created a new vocabulary for chess that made the strategy of the masters more intelligible. He also developed several theories of play, including the Nimzowitsch-Indian defense.

About “My System”

Aron Nimzowitsch’s book My System was a very influential book regarding how to play chess. It set out many principles that are still followed today and is understood to be a classic of its time. The book is still a valuable tool for anybody wishing to develop and improve their chess skills.

Resources:

The Principle: “Take the Open File!”

One of Nimzowitsch’s key strategic principles is to control open files with your rooks. Below is a demonstration game where he used this principle to devastating effect.

Nimzowitsch vs Duhm – Demonstrating Open File Control
MoveWhite (Nimzowitsch)Black (Duhm)
1c4e6
2e4c5
3Nc3Nc6
4f4d6
5Nf3g6
6d4Bg7
7dxc5dxc5
8Qxd8+Kxd8
9e5h5
10Be3b6
11O-O-O+Ke7
12Bf2Nh6
13Bh4+Kf8
14Bd3Bb7
15Be4Na5
16Bxb7Nxb7
17Rd7Rb8
18Rhd1Kg8
19Be7Nf5
20Ng5Re8
21Bf6Bxf6
22exf6Na5
23Rd8Kf8
24R1d7Nh6
25Nce4Nc6
26Rxf7+Nxf7
27Nxe6Kg8
28Rxe8Kh7
29N4g5+Nxg5
30Nxg5+Kh6
31Rxh8#1-0

Key moments: Notice how Nimzowitsch seized control of the d-file after the queen trade (move 11 O-O-O+, move 18 Rhd1), then used this dominance to invade Black’s position. His rooks on the 7th and 8th ranks (Rd7, Rd8) became overwhelming, demonstrating the power of controlling open files.

Ladder Board Competition

We started the 1st week of the Ladder Board games which were played on a time control of 15 minutes each and all players were encouraged to notate their games. All did well.

1st Session – Advanced

NamePlayedWonDrawLossTotal
Peter11001
Nicolas11001
Nicholas Mitze11001
Harvey10010
Kautum10010
Neil10010
Nathanial00000
Rafan00000

Results: Harvey 0 Nicolas 1, Nicholas Mitze 1 Neil 0, Kautum 0 Peter 1

1st Session – Intermediate

NamePlayedWonDrawLossTotal
Kit11001
Pavina10100.5
JH10100.5
Nirvan10010
Markas00000
Sarah00000
Liam M00000
Liam00000

Results: Kit 1 Nirvan 0, Pavina ½ JH ½

2nd Session – Intermediate & Beginners

NamePlayedWonDrawLossTotal
Nilay11001
Andres (Beginner)11001
Teo11001
Hektor11001
Jake10010
Manvik10010
Sepanta (Beginner)10010
Koko00000

Results: Hektor 1 Coach 0, Jake 0 Nilay 0, Manvik 0 Teo 1, Andreas 1 Sepanta 0


Note: Ladder Board scoring – 1 point for a win, 0.5 for a draw, 0 for a loss

Well done to all participants! See you next week!

Categories: News

Eric Sachs

eric-sachs