Bin auf die Seite
http://www.chessgames.com/
gestossen, bei der es sehr viele kommentierte Partien gibt, die man als pgn downloaden kann. Als Capablanca-Fan musste ich mich einfach bedienen. So konnte ich 38 relevante, kommentierte Partien herunterladen. Das Kästchen annotation (kommentiert) sollte bei Bedarf in der Suchmaske angekreuzt sein.
Hier z.B. eine Partie von Fischer gg. Unzicker (Zwecks PC-Ansicht untenstehende Daten markieren, in einen Texteditor kopieren und mit der Endung pgn [z.B. Fischer.pgn] abspeichern):
[Event "Varna Olympiad Final"]
[Site "-"]
[Date "1962.10.04"]
[EventDate "?"]
[Round "7"]
[Result "0-1"]
[White "W Unzicker"]
[Black "R Fischer"]
[ECO "B92"]
[WhiteElo "?"]
[BlackElo "?"]
[PlyCount "52"]
1. e4 {Notes by Bobby Fischer} c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 a6 6. Be2 {On and off, White resorts to this solid and still respected system (championed by Smyslov) whenever the sharper tries fail.} e5 {Black's expectation in this Najdorf Variation is that his control of important central squares, with possibilities of Q-side expansion, will more than compensate for the slight weakness of his backward QP.} 7. Nb3 Be6 {To provoke f4-5 weakening White's KP.} 8.
O-O Nbd7 9. f4 Qc7 10. f5 Bc4 11. a4 {To hinder ...b5.} Be7 {Better than 11...Rc8 12 a5 Be7 13 Bxc4 Qxc4 14 Ra4 Qc7 15 Be3 h6 16 Rf2 with a bind. (Schmid-Evans, Varna 1962)} 12. Be3 O-O 13. a5 {A critical alternative is 13 g4 d5! 14 exd5 (if 14 g5 d4! or 14 Nxd5 Nxd5 15 exd5 Nf6 16 d6? Bxd6 17 Bxc4 Qxc4 18 Qxd6? Qxg4+ 19 Kh1 Qe4+), Bb4 15 g5 Bxc3 16 gxf6 Bxb2 17 fxg7 Rfd8 18 Rb1 Bc3. White's Pawns are overextended and his King is exposed.} b5 {Too passive is 13...h6 14 g4 Nh7 15 Bf2 followed by h4.} 14. axb6
Nxb6 15. Bxb6 {? At Curacao 1962, Geller had found the right line : 15 Kh1! Rfc8 16 Bxb6 Qxb6 17 Bxc4 Rxc4 18 Qe2 Rb4 19 Ra2! and Black is hard-pressed to defend his a-pawn, but 19...h6! 20 Rfa1 Bf8 21 Rxa6 Rxa6 22 Rxa6 Qb7 23 Na5 Qc7 24 Nb3 Qb7 (Zuckerman)=.} Qxb6+ 16. Kh1 Bb5 {! Intending ...Bc6 followed by a5.} 17. Bxb5 {White has alredy dissipated his theoretical advantage. He should settle for 17 Nxb5 axb5 18 Qd3 with opposite colored Bishops.} axb5 18. Nd5 Nxd5 19. Qxd5 Ra4 {! Avoids conceding the a-file and puts pressure on the KP.} 20.
c3 Qa6 21. h3 {It's hard for White to hit upon a constructive plan. At Curacao 1962, Tal played against me 21 Rad1 Rc8 22 Nc1 b4 23 Nd3!? (White's in a bad way anyhow) bxc3 24 bxc3 and now ...Rxc3 (instead of my ...Ra5 lemon) wins outright. If 25 Nxe5 dxe5 26 Qxe5 (Qd8+ Bf8!) Bb4! 27 Qxc3 Qxf1+! (Kmoch).} Rc8 22. Rfe1 h6 {! A handy 'luft', as becomes apparent later.} 23. Kh2 Bg5 24. g3 {? Creating more K-side weaknesses. Better is 24 Rad1.} Qa7 25. Kg2 Ra2 26. Kf1 {What else? On 26 Rxa2 Qxa2 27 Re2 Rxc3! Now Black has a decisive shot.}
Rxc3 {! On 27 Rxa2 (27 bxc3 Qf2 mate) Rf3+ 28 Ke2 Rf2+ 29 Kd3 Qxa2 30 Ra1 Qxb2 wins. Black's first rank is no longer vulnerable since the King can escape to h7 on the check.} 0-1