The London Mindsports Centre in Hammersmith opened its doors in 2021, after it was converted from a Salvation Army building. The centre now hosts lectures and tournaments in Chess, Go and Bridge, besides other events. The Mindsports Masters all-play-all events, held earlier this month, were designed with title aspirants in mind. Among them was 13-year-old Shreyas Royal, one of England’s brightest prospects. His international rating has already crossed the 2400 threshold required for an international master title, and at Hammersmith he earned a ‘norm’ – one of three tournament results he will need to qualify for the title. He scored an important win against a grandmaster in the third round. Black has just played 25…Nc5-e6, which prevents White adding further pressure to the g6 pawn with Nd5-f4. But Royal’s next move exposes the flaw.
Shreyas Royal-Alexander Cherniaev
Mindsports Masters GM norm, September 2022
26 h6+! Kxh6 Losing quickly, but 26…Kf8 27 Nxf6 Qd8 28 Nd5 Ke8 was too miserable to bear.
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