Maurice Ashley

Look at Garry Kasparov. After he loses, invariably he wins the next game. He just kills the next guy. That's something that we have to learn to be able to do.

If you are reading this instead of viewing a chess puzzle or game, then you must enable JavaScript on this website.

[Event "rated untimed match"]
[Site "?"]
[Date "????.??.??"]
[Round "?"]
[White "Unknown"]
[Black "Unknown273"]
[Result "1-0"]
[Annotator "David Hayes"]
[BlackElo "0"]
[FEN "1r3rk1/1b1p2n1/5q2/p1p3p1/Pp6/2P1PP1Q/2B2K1P/RN1R4 w - - 0 1"]
[SetUp "1"]
[TimeControl "0"]
[WhiteElo "0"]

1. Bh7+ Kf7 2. Rxd7+ ( { White can try: } 2. Qxd7+ Qe7 3. Bg6+ Kf6 4. Rd6+ Ne6 5. Bh5 { With equal chances. } ) 2... Ke8 3. Rxb7 Qxf3+ ( { Black can try: } 3... Rxb7 4. Qc8+ Kf7 5. Qxb7+ Qe7 6. Qxe7+ Kxe7 { White wins with a large material
advantage. } ) 4. Qxf3 Rxf3+ 5. Kxf3 Rxb7 { White wins with a large material
advantage. } 1-0