It’s not often that I see Penang’s up-and-coming International Master Poh Yu Tian lose to another local player, but that’s exactly what happened today in this year’s Penang Closed Chess Tournament. Granted, his opponent, FIDE Master Wong Yinn Long (pictured), is no pushover, but games between these two have almost invariably drifted towards draws. This time was different.
Yu Tian seemed slightly out of sorts from the outset. As early as move eight - remarkably shallow territory for a player of his calibre - he made an inaccuracy in the opening, and it was very unlike him. That small slip allowed Yinn Long to impose a structural weakness, saddling White with compromised pawns and, more importantly, a long-term problem that never quite went away. From there, Black played with admirable patience, gradually tightening the screws before taking over completely in the later stages.
Here is the game, with a few brief observations along the way.
[UTCDate "2025.12.14"]
[UTCTime "02:04:10"]
[Event "Penang Closed Chess Tournament 2025"]
[Date "2025.12.13"]
[Round "5"]
[White "IM Poh, Yu Tian"]
[Black "FM Wong, Yinn Long"]
[Result "0-1"]
[Board "1"]
A well-earned win for Yinn Long, who capitalised ruthlessly on an early structural concession and never let go. For Yu Tian, this was one of those rare off-days where a small early lapse snowballed into something much larger. For the rest of us, it was an instructive reminder of how unforgiving chess can be at this level.


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