 Okay, welcome to the studio, Balash. You drew today with Olga Giria, and I believe she sprang a surprise on you in the opening. Is that correct? Well, I think I tried to sprang the first surprise, but it backfired. I never played the Queen's Gambit accepted, but I know that she's a very good theoretician. So at all cost I wanted to avoid the preparation, but it turned out that I went for a line that she and her team analyzed two years ago. And she remembered basically all the details up to one point. I think she misplayed the move order one move before the end, because there would have been an amazing tactic. And actually I think I managed to avoid some pitfalls and found the best continuation, but had she played the best move order, then it would have been really hard for me to avoid the further coming ones. Sounds fascinating. Let's have a look at the game. Okay Balash, we've got a position here. White's just played Queen to G4, threatening Bishop h6. Tell us something about the position. Well, as I have mentioned already, I managed to step into some amazing preparation by Olga. And of course the strategy is Bishop h6, threatening mate, and then I have to give up the exchange. So it makes sense to pre-empt the FA square either for Bishop f8 or then to put G6. First I wanted to play rook fd8, because it feels more natural. But then actually it gives white... Sorry, can you move back? Thank you. So rook d8, then it... Why does it do it? No, okay. Never mind. Maybe try that. Okay, thank you. So it gives white time and let's say Bishop h6, G6. And either h4 I think or white gets a lot of time to stabilize it, rook c1. And all these maneuvers with knight d7 doesn't really work, because I think let's say there is knight d6. Oh wow. And the queen c4 is not working, because rook is not on c8. If I were in time to take on c4, then that's fine. And if it takes then, okay, I guess Bishop g6 and next move Bishop h7, Bishop f7, everything is threatened. So through d8 it gives too much time and even some h4, as long as maneuver is possible. And the other option I checked was like it's drastic measure to play f5. Because if white takes then I'm more or less happy, because okay, I don't say I'm too happy, but... King a j8 and white cannot take, because some rook a, rook e1, backhand mate and my bishop come to life. And okay, I think I have some compensation, still my king is quite weak. But she mentioned that what I was afraid of, that if f5, then just queen g3. And the pawn on e6 is extremely weak, so I cannot really move my knight. It's a picturesque position, but white's knights are more threatening. So I played rook fc8, and the point is that okay, Bishop a6 is natural, sorry. Bishop ff8, I would do it with a rook on d8, because now 9d6 is I think like game over, or very close to that. So I played g6, and this is critical position, because it makes sense, I say e, white either plays h4, but then I think I'm in time to do 9d7, because if 9d6, now I can take on c4. And if h5, I think I can take, because if I take on c4, then there's taking on g6, but I think I defend everything. After a g a g, I can take everything and king a j8, and there is no mate. And actually after rook g8, it is me who can start attacking. So okay, queen g3, and instead rook c1 would have been the best move order as told by Olga, because the point is that if I play 9d7 now, which, okay, there is bishop f6 computer move, but I wouldn't have found it, I think. Sorry, this is a queen g3. This one I still spotted, because the point is that now the point is defended, 9d6 is threatening. Because there is no 9d5 intermezzo, and if I take the knight, which I intended to do as a last measure, then bishop b3 traps my queen. And I was going to sacrifice it and then, okay, some bishop f8, bishop g7, trying to set up some sort of blockade, but I didn't have high hopes with that. It was like a drastic measure. So instead of rook c1, 9d7. Oh, this position. Yeah, and then queen g3, and then Olga told me that bishop f6 is only move. Everything else is like plus one. I don't say I would have found it. And the point is that if white takes, like bishop g6, therefore the knight is defended. That's why it's important that bishop g6 is included. I can take this one, and if 9d6 it's important I take with this knight, because if 9d6 I take on c1, let's show. And bishop d5, and it's plus equal, either white wins or I can make a draw. But then she mixed up the move order with this queen g3. Queen g3, yeah. And yeah, I was aware that if 9d7, probably rook c1, it leads to the same. So I played b3, and with the point that if knight takes b4, then I gain a crucial tempo with... I'm sorry. Can I go on to show one more variation, because there is one more another tactic. I found, but I'm not sure it works. So everything is hanging, and somehow my pieces come to life, and there is no mating threat, so let's say white starts taking pieces. If I take on a1, then 9d6, and my knight is trapped and rook is hanging. So I fought queen c4, rook c1, and my big idea was 9d4. And I think I win an exchange in every move order, because my next move, okay, I can pre-move 9d2 in online games as well. And okay, she takes knight e2, I take the queen, I take on c4, and even if she steps out, she steps out 9d2 still, and this leads to the same, so that was my plan. So of course, she played bishop b1 instead, and off her draw. To be honest, I off her draw, I think, at move 15, because as the Hungarian saying goes, never lose a game without offering a draw, so I tried. And then she off her draw, I was 15 minutes behind on clock, and still I didn't see what to do for sure, because if she doesn't off her draw, I don't feel that something is critical, but on online engine still shows that rook d8 is only move that holds the position of everything as plus one, and I was going to sacrifice a pawn with 9d4. If you can go on for one more minute. So where do I go to? Bishop b1, final position. Oh, sorry, there you are. No problem. So there is knight before tactic, but okay, it doesn't work because of 9d6. So I tried to play knight, I was most probably going to play this, queen c4, and the point is that if rook c1, I can take on a4. With the pawn on b4, I'm forced to play queen a2, and with the queen on e2, there would be some 9d6 and bishop g6 tactics as always, but now I'm in contact with the bishop because of the x-ray and what cannot take. So knight a4, so instead she should take on b3, instead of rook c1. Instead of... This one, yeah. For some reason down here it doesn't light. Can we go by the arrows? Okay, so we agreed that after queen takes b3, I either take or play rook b1st and have some positional compensation based on the weaknesses on the queen side. I don't know what the engine will show because we haven't checked this one. I would have been reasonably happy to get this instead of the queen sacrifice because I feel that I have good drawing chances, but it is what it is. Okay. Well, thank you very much. Thank you.