The A team managed a comfortable win in the end against Northwich. At the bottom of the page, Rob Furness kindly provides us with an insight into his standout game against Tom Walton.
 - Jonathan on board 2 v Metcalfe 
 - Some of the early action 
Match Report – 23 rd Sept 2019 – Northwich A.
 Apologies for the late submission of this report – my opponent’s efforts deserved sooner praise, but I
 found myself deluged in work.
 5½ – ½ is one of those scorelines that gives the impression of a fairly straightforward evening, but
 although though Northwich A were short of their top 2 board players (Richard and Paul’s absence
 meant that Northwich’s average grade was 100 (against our 175)) we were given more than a
 decent match.
 I acknowledge that this report is woefully short on match commentary: the reason is that I spent
 little time on manoeuvres checking out the other boards and spent most of the evening at my board
 undertaking significant works of repair to my increasingly threadbare position.
 Damian was the first to finish and did so before I even got a chance to have a good look at it, 1-0.
 However, although I got the sense that things were starting to turn in our favour on most boards
 (mine being the notable exception), there was no change to the match score until the sun had long
 disappeared below the horizon and we had got to the business end of the evening.
 John Benyon’s 2.e5 against the Sicilian on top board appeared to be holding material equality
 against Marek, but Marek found a tactic with queen and rook which (IIRC) exploited a possible back
 rank mate and gain the upper hand – 2-0.
 Rob was next to finish, and his game with annotation of the tactics is already on the blog, 3-0.
 I had expected Tom to finish off his board 6 opponent somewhat sooner, not because of the grade
 disparity, but because Tom had steadily accumulated a significant material advantage at seemingly
 minimal risk, but he later observed that although he was a rook up he still had to work hard for the
 win. 4-0.
 Iain had started off in usual buccaneering style and entered into tactics early on, but they seemed to
 fizzle out, and he ended a pawn up in a better ending, 5-0.
 My ‘trauma’ was the last game to finish, and is one which I would prefer to forget. This is not
 because Charles missed a clearly winning knight sac (or to be more exact, spotted it and then
 rejected it) so strong that I had seriously considered resigning on the spot.
 No, Caissa had worse to come…
 Charles played well but it is fair to say that the game was not ‘el classico’. Charles managed to lose
 the exchange but still had a lot of play with connected passed pawns, but after much effort (and
 clock time !) I had shepherded the game into a winning K+P ending, and needed only to choose
 between pushing my remaining pawn (to where it could not be caught before queening), or moving
 my king, I inexplicably and somewhat absent-mindedly touched my king….and we all know the rules
 don’t we ? Ouch ! 5½ – ½ .
 No excuses…It brought back terrible memories from last season when I did the same at St Helens
 and there is a moral about sitting on your hands here somewhere. In truth, I could, and probably
 should, have been dead and buried at least a couple of times. I didn’t get any traction in the
 opening, shoved my h pawn down the board, failed to castle, and for these sacrifices of position, I
 got nothing of note for it except grief.
Next match: St.Helens (home) on 9 th Oct.
Jonathan Smith – A Team Captain
| Northwich | V | Culcheth A | 
| John Benyon | 0-1 | Marek Mazek | 
| Charles Metcalfe | 0.5-0.5 | Jonathan Smith | 
| Peter Hamill-Stewert | 0-1 | Iain Johnson | 
| Tom Walton | 0-1 | Robert Furness | 
| Aaron Milne | 0-1 | Damian McCarthy | 
| John Lightfoot | 0-1 | Tom Vout | 
| Final Score | 0.5-5.5 | (Culcheth white on boards 2,4 & 6) | 
 
					