Unity Chess Multiple Choice 635
public poll
B: Bb2 β 6
πππππππ 67%
Morteza, @hoseini139562, @RichardPeng, @AryanLeekha, George, Sanjana
C: d5 β 2
ππ 22%
@Sophia_Peng, Zhenrui
A: e5 β 1
π 11%
@roshan_sethuraman
π₯ 9 people voted so far.
public poll
B: Bb2 β 6
πππππππ 67%
Morteza, @hoseini139562, @RichardPeng, @AryanLeekha, George, Sanjana
C: d5 β 2
ππ 22%
@Sophia_Peng, Zhenrui
A: e5 β 1
π 11%
@roshan_sethuraman
π₯ 9 people voted so far.
Unity Chess Multiple Choice 636
public poll
B: g5 β 6
πππππππ 55%
EspaΓ±a πͺπΈ, Ψ±ΨΆΨ§, Morteza, @hoseini139562, @roshan_sethuraman, @AryanLeekha
A: f4 β 4
πππππ 36%
@Sophia_Peng, @RichardPeng, Zhenrui, Sanjana
C: Qe7 β 1
π 9%
George
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
public poll
B: g5 β 6
πππππππ 55%
EspaΓ±a πͺπΈ, Ψ±ΨΆΨ§, Morteza, @hoseini139562, @roshan_sethuraman, @AryanLeekha
A: f4 β 4
πππππ 36%
@Sophia_Peng, @RichardPeng, Zhenrui, Sanjana
C: Qe7 β 1
π 9%
George
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
UNITY CHESS INFOGRAPHY
π Chess History - Tournaments
πΉ Karlsbad 1929
#chess_history_tornaments
#Karlsbad_1929
@unitychess
π Chess History - Tournaments
πΉ Karlsbad 1929
#chess_history_tornaments
#Karlsbad_1929
@unitychess
βοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈ
β Chess History - Tournaments
β»οΈ Karlsbad 1929
βͺοΈThe fourth international master chess tournament to be held in the spa resort of Karlsbad, Czechoslovakia in 1929 was a round robin event involving 22 of the best chess masters in the world.
Of the top players, only world champion Alexander Alekhine and former world champion Emanuel Lasker were missing.
βͺοΈThe line up of players included such names as
π»Jose Capablanca
π»Efim Bogoljubov
π»Frank Marshall
π»Akiba Rubinstein
π»Milan Vidmar
π»Aron Nimzowitsch
π»Rudolf Spielmann.
Among the remaining invitations, one notable participant was
π»Vera Menchik, the women's world champion,
Who joined despite the protests of some male colleagues.
Including fellow participant
π»Albert Becker
βͺοΈThe tournament was held in the Kurhaus Imperial Hotel.
βͺοΈThe time control used was 30 moves in two hours followed by 15 moves in one hour.
βͺοΈDespite Spielmann's amazing beginning of 9 points earned in the first ten rounds followed by Capablanca's shared lead in the standings from the thirteenth round on, it was to be Nimzowitsch's "finest hour," with a win over Savielly Tartakower propelling him to first place and the grand prize of 20,000 Kronen.
Although he used this victory to campaign for his right to challenge Alekhine for the world championship, losses to the world champion at San Remo (1930) and Bled (1931) would dash his chances of competing for the world crown. Nevertheless, this victory amongst such a field of chess masters would shine as the high point of Nimzowitsch's career.
β¦οΈAll Prizes was:
π»Nimzowitsch got 20,000 Kronen
π»Capablanca and Spielmann 12,000 Kronen each
π»Rubinstein 8,000 Kronen
π»Becker, Vidmar and Euwe 5,000 Kronen each
π»Bogoljubow 3,000 Kronen
βοΈ The final standings and crosstable was as aboveπ
βοΈ Download "Karlsbad 1929 Games Database" by PGN formatπ
#chess_history_tornaments
#Karlsbad_1929
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
β Chess History - Tournaments
β»οΈ Karlsbad 1929
βͺοΈThe fourth international master chess tournament to be held in the spa resort of Karlsbad, Czechoslovakia in 1929 was a round robin event involving 22 of the best chess masters in the world.
Of the top players, only world champion Alexander Alekhine and former world champion Emanuel Lasker were missing.
βͺοΈThe line up of players included such names as
π»Jose Capablanca
π»Efim Bogoljubov
π»Frank Marshall
π»Akiba Rubinstein
π»Milan Vidmar
π»Aron Nimzowitsch
π»Rudolf Spielmann.
Among the remaining invitations, one notable participant was
π»Vera Menchik, the women's world champion,
Who joined despite the protests of some male colleagues.
Including fellow participant
π»Albert Becker
βͺοΈThe tournament was held in the Kurhaus Imperial Hotel.
βͺοΈThe time control used was 30 moves in two hours followed by 15 moves in one hour.
βͺοΈDespite Spielmann's amazing beginning of 9 points earned in the first ten rounds followed by Capablanca's shared lead in the standings from the thirteenth round on, it was to be Nimzowitsch's "finest hour," with a win over Savielly Tartakower propelling him to first place and the grand prize of 20,000 Kronen.
Although he used this victory to campaign for his right to challenge Alekhine for the world championship, losses to the world champion at San Remo (1930) and Bled (1931) would dash his chances of competing for the world crown. Nevertheless, this victory amongst such a field of chess masters would shine as the high point of Nimzowitsch's career.
β¦οΈAll Prizes was:
π»Nimzowitsch got 20,000 Kronen
π»Capablanca and Spielmann 12,000 Kronen each
π»Rubinstein 8,000 Kronen
π»Becker, Vidmar and Euwe 5,000 Kronen each
π»Bogoljubow 3,000 Kronen
βοΈ The final standings and crosstable was as aboveπ
βοΈ Download "Karlsbad 1929 Games Database" by PGN formatπ
#chess_history_tornaments
#Karlsbad_1929
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
π° Our selected game from Karlsbad 1929 tournamentπ
πΈAron Nimzowitsch vs Max Euwe
πΈKarlsbad 1929
πΈBird Opening, Ao2
β¦οΈReview this gameπ
β¦οΈPGN file of this game is in:
Karlsbad 1929 Games Database
(https://t.me/unitychess/11378 )
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
πΈAron Nimzowitsch vs Max Euwe
πΈKarlsbad 1929
πΈBird Opening, Ao2
β¦οΈReview this gameπ
β¦οΈPGN file of this game is in:
Karlsbad 1929 Games Database
(https://t.me/unitychess/11378 )
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
Telegram
Unity Chess
βͺοΈKarlsbad 1929 Games Database
βͺοΈPGN format
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
βͺοΈPGN format
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
Rd 7 at Sinquefield Cup in St, Louis - all games drawn by repetition. Magnus Carlsen (2836) - Fabiano Caruana (2822) lasted 41 moves. Drawn by repetition. Two more rounds to go. Caruana leads with 4.5 out of 7. Average rating in this event is 2788 (Category XXII).
Round 7 results and standings. We have two more games to go! Do you think anyone will catch Caruana? #SinquefieldCup
GMs Yannick Gozzoli (2596), Romain Edouard (2638), and Tigran Gharamian (2614) finished tied first in the tournament and are now playing tie-breaks for the champion title.
#chessnews
#chessnews
Beverwijk, 24th Jan 1965. In final round of the Hoogovens tournament, Efim Geller (USSR) faces Antonio Medina Garcia (Spain). Looking on is Lajos Portisch (Hungary).
@UnityChess
@UnityChess