Anon

When the chess game is over, the Pawn and the King go back to the same box

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[Event "Second Anglo-Pacific championship"]
[Site "?"]
[Date "1994.??.??"]
[Round "?"]
[White "Eklund, Dave"]
[Black "Callaway, Joseph"]
[Result "0-1"]
[BlackElo "unknown"]
[ECO "B01"]
[TimeControl "0"]
[WhiteElo "unknown"]

{ Black skates on thin ice after a pawn grab, but manages to stay high and
dry. } 1. e4 { B01: Scandinavian Defence } 1... d5 2. exd5 Qxd5 3. Nc3 Qa5 4. d4 Nf6 5. Nf3 Bf5 6. Bc4 e6 7. Ne5 c6 8. g4 Be4 9. Qe2 Bb4 { The rook on h1 is now in
danger given that black can castle out of trouble should the center begin to
fall after Nxf7. } ( { The rook on h1 was immune: } 9... Bxh1 10. Nxf7 Bd5 11. Bxd5 Nxd5 ( 11... cxd5 12. Qxe6+ Be7 13. Nd6+ Kd8 14. Qc8# ) 12. Qxe6+ Be7 13. Nd6+ Kd8 14. Qc8# ) 10. O-O Bxc3 11. bxc3 Qxc3 12. Rb1 b5 13. Bb3 Bd5 14. g5 Ne4 15. Rd1 O-O 16. Rd3 Qa5 17. Bxd5 cxd5 18. Ba3 { This move does develop
white's last piece, but at the cost of forcing black to give his king more
room to escape the coming attack.  If instead, white had played 18. Rh3, then
white's attack may well have won the day. } 18... Rc8 19. Qh5 { Do you see the mate
threat? } 19... g6 20. Qh4 Nc6 { The white knight must die. } 21. Rh3 h5 22. gxh6 Nxe5 23. h7+ Kh8 24. dxe5 Rc3 25. Rb4 Rxh3 26. Qxh3 Ng5 { This move is more
cautious than the aggressive 26. Qc7. } 27. Qe3 Nxh7 28. Rh4 { The mate threat
is Qh6. } 28... g5 29. Rh3 Qa4 30. Qf3 Qxc2 31. Qxf7 Qd1+ 32. Kg2 Qg4+ 33. Rg3 Qe4+ 34. Kg1 b4 35. f3 Qb1+ 36. Kg2 Rc8 37. Qxe6 Rc2+ 38. Kh3 Qf1+ 39. Kg4 Qc4+ { White resigned given 40. Kh5 (40. Kh3 Qh4#) 40... Qh4+ 41. Kg6 Nf8+. } 0-1