[Event "Blog diagrams: Mining - example 2"] [Site "https://lichess.org/study/9GFpNdwd/ZxPVhgbj"] [Result "*"] [Variant "Atomic"] [ECO "?"] [Opening "?"] [Annotator "https://lichess.org/@/Illion"] [UTCDate "2017.09.08"] [UTCTime "19:30:18"] [Source "https://lichess.org/study/9GFpNdwd/ZxPVhgbj"] [Orientation "white"] 1. Nf3 f6 2. e3 d5 3. Nd4 Bg4 4. f3 Bf5 5. Nb5?! { A dubious move, losing a whole piece to try and trick black. } 5... Bxc2 6. Nxc7 b5?! { 6...b5, seems natural, but mines the dark bishop's ideal development squares. In this position in particular, it allows white to escape with a little precision. } { [%csl Rb4,Rc5] } (6... a6! { 6...a6! is the correct move for the same reasons outlined in the first example - it doesn't mine the dark bishop's development squares. }) 7. Rc1 Rc8 8. Rc7 Rxc7 9. Bd3 { [%csl Rh7][%cal Rd3h7] } 9... g6 10. Kf2! { A finesse to avoid ...Bd6 with tempo then ...Bc7 closing the file. } 10... e6 11. Rc1 { With c5 mined, black doesn't have ...Bc5 blocking the file, and white's rook will invade for at least a draw. } { [%csl Rb5,Rc5][%cal Rd3b5,Gf8c5] } *