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In this game from the Amsterdam Interzonal, Klaus Darga faces Hungarian legend Lajos Portisch in a rich strategic battle full of transpositions, pins, and a powerful passed pawn. Darga once again begins with his tournament trademark 1.Nf3, steering the game through multiple opening transformations — from the Réti to the Anglo-Indian, into the Anti-Nimzo-Indian, and finally into a Semi-Tarrasch structure of the Queen’s Gambit Declined. If you enjoy understanding how grandmasters navigate move orders and reach favorable structures, this game is a masterclass. The critical moment comes when piece coordination and X-ray tactics dominate the board. A poisoned pawn, a dangerous pin, and the advance of a central passed pawn combine to create mounting pressure. Once that pawn crosses the “equator,” its value skyrockets — and Portisch’s position begins to collapse under precise pressure. By the end, Darga demonstrates clean technique, exploiting rook activity and long-range coordination to force resignation. About Klaus Darga Klaus Victor Darga (born February 24, 1934) became German Junior Champion in 1951 and shared first place at the 1953 World Junior Championship with Oscar Panno. He won the West German Championship in 1955 and 1961 and delivered one of his finest performances at Winnipeg 1967, finishing ahead of stars like Bent Larsen, Boris Spassky, and Paul Keres. Awarded the Grandmaster title in 1964, Darga represented West Germany in ten Olympiads between 1954 and 1978 and later served as national team coach. Known for his English Opening and Ruy Lopez as White, and the Sicilian Defense as Black, he eventually transitioned into a career in computing, working as a programmer for IBM. This game highlights Darga’s deep positional understanding, tactical alertness, and mastery of dynamic pawn play during his peak competitive years. If you enjoy historical grandmaster games, classic Interzonal battles, and instructive middlegame transitions, this is one you won’t want to miss. #KlausDarga #LajosPortisch #ChessHistory #Interzonal1964 #QueensGambitDeclined #AntiNimzo #ChessStrategy