George Duke wrote on Tue, Apr 2, 2013 11:31 AM EDT:
Where does Black go wrong? 21 Q-f2 g6.
Instead '21 Q-f2 Nxe5' improvement. After that exchange sacrifice
finishes, Black will be behind point only. 21 Q-f2 Nxe5 22 dxe5... Then
since immediate '22 ...N-c5' threatens 23 ...N-d3 forking Rook/Queen,
White is not free to advance his one passed Pawn, rendering another title
moot.
After correction 21 ...Nxe5, Black has the more flexible attack. Four
Pawns to one will be stationed westside, and all four White
Bishop-Rook-Rook-Queen are rather hemmed. In all, a Black prospect more
than equal the temporized single material point. So Botvinnik's
self-described personal best ever is another imperfect game.
When finding at last the Perfect Wave,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Endless_Summer,
there were one after another of them there oceanically, whilst search a
solitary game of Chess remains.
Next, http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1012326 is 1925 Reti versus Alekhine. Where does White go wrong? Before even determining where the first brilliancy occurs in CV terms, this game is remarkable the last ten moves 30 to 40. Do the several declines to capture unguarded piece all make sense?