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September FIDE Ratings: Carlsen 12 Points Ahead Of Caruana.

https://bit.ly/2PtVmIz
17th USSR Championship (Moscow, 1949).

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Geller & Petrosian were making their debuts. Their fortunes were very different. Geller finished 3rd-4th, & was in the lead before the final round, 19th, round. 'Iron Tigran' began with 5 losses...

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CH_URS49.pgn
159.1 KB
πŸ”˜ 17th USSR Championship (Moscow, 1949)
πŸ”˜ PGN format

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πŸ…ΎοΈ UNITY OPEN GRAND PRIX TOURNAMENT
♦️ Saturday, September 8th

β–ͺ️ Don't forget to register
β–ͺ️ Share with your friends!!

Rules & RegulationsπŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡
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@unitychess
πŸ…ΎοΈ UNITY OPEN GRAND PRIX TOURNAMENT
♦️ Saturday, September 8th

β™₯️β™₯️β™₯️β™₯️β™₯️β™₯️
+$2200 Fund Prizes
β™₯️β™₯️β™₯️β™₯️β™₯️β™₯️


β–ͺ️ Don't forget to register
β–ͺ️ Share with your friends!!
πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡
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βœ… Rules and Regulations

πŸ”Ή PRIZES:
πŸ”ΈOpen
1st: $1000
2nd: $500
3rd: $300
4th: $200
.......................................
1st under 2000: $100
1st under 1800: $100

πŸ”ΈReserve (1200-1600)
1st: Laptop 2nd: Tablet 3rd: Kindle
πŸ”ΈBooster (under 1200)
1st Laptop 2nd: Tablet 3rd: Kindle
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Best under 600: $100 in book prizes
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πŸ”ΊπŸ”Ί All prizes are 100% guaranteed! πŸ”ΊπŸ”Ί

πŸ”Ή ROUNDS SCHEDULE:
Round 1: 9-11 am
Round 2: 11:10-1:10 pm
Round 3: 1:40- 3:40 pm
Round 4: 3:50- 5:50 pm
Round 5: 6-8 pm


πŸ”Ή ENTRY FEE:
$50 by August 31st
$60 by September 7th
$70 at the site
πŸ”ΊπŸ”ΊThe entry for GMs, WGMs, IMs, WIMs, FMs, WFMs would be free. πŸ”ΊπŸ”Ί

πŸ”ΉNo playing up is allowed in any section.
Players have the option to enter the tournament with
their current or posted rating.
πŸ”ΉHalf point byes OK all rounds, limit 2, must commit before round 2.

πŸ”ΊπŸ”ΊπŸ”ΊπŸ”ΊπŸ”ΊπŸ”ΊπŸ”Ί
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UNITY CHESS INFOGRAPHY

βœ… Chess History - Tournaments
β–ͺ️ Hastings 1895

#chess_history_tornaments
#Hastings_1895

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βœ… Chess History - Tournaments
β–ͺ️ Hastings 1895

πŸ”°The chess club in the English town of Hastings was founded in 1882. In 1895 the club organized a tournament that was the strongest ever held up to that time. Taking place over the month of August all the leading players of the day participated.

πŸ”° The Hastings 1895 chess tournament was a round-robin tournament of chess conducted in Hastings, England from August 5 to September 2, 1895.
Hastings 1895 was arguably the strongest tournament in history at the time it occurred.[1][2] All of the top players of the generation competed. It was one of the first times such a "super-tournament" was conducted.

πŸ”° Harry Nelson Pillsbury won the tournament against a strong competitive group. Pillsbury, a young American unknown in Europe, was the surprise winner with 16Β½ out of 21 points – ahead of Mikhail Chigorin (16) and world champion Emanuel Lasker (15Β½). Following the success of the event, the Hastings tournament would become an annual feature.

πŸ”°The organizers and players produced a Book of the Tournament, in which the participants annotated their own games. Like the Tournament, the Book too became an annual feature and was of very high instructional value.

♦️The game Steinitz versus von Bardeleben in round 10 won the first brilliancy prize in this tournament!!

βœ”οΈ The final standings and crosstable was as aboveπŸ‘†
βœ”οΈ Download "Hastings 1895 Games Database" by PGN formatπŸ‘‡


#chess_history_tornaments
#Hastings_1895
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@Hastings1895.pgn
154.4 KB
πŸ”Ή Hastings 1895 Games Database
πŸ”Ή PGN format
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β–ͺ️Wilhelm Steinitz vs Curt von Bardeleben
β–ͺ️Hastings (1895) Round 10
β–ͺ️Italian Game (C54)

πŸ”Έ Position after 21 ... Ke8
♦️Read more and review itπŸ‘‡
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✴️✴️✴️✴️

πŸ”ΈHastings (1895) Round 10
πŸ”ΈWilhelm Steinitz vs Curt von Bardeleben

πŸ”° This game won the first brilliancy prize in Hastings 1895 super tournament!!
In round ten, the position on the above arose after a Giuoco Piano: 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Bc5 4.c3 Nf6 5.d4 exd4 6.cxd4 Bb4+ 7.Nc3 d5 8.exd5 Nxd5 9.0-0 Be6 10.Bg5 Be7 11.Bxd5! Bxd5 12.Nxd5 Qxd5 13.Bxe7 Nxe7 14.Re1 f6 15.Qe2 Qd7 16.Rac1 c6?! 17.d5! cxd5 18.Nd4 Kf7 19.Ne6 Rhc8 20.Qg4 g6 21.Ng5+ Ke8.

πŸ”°At this point Steinitz played one of the most famous moves in history:
22.Rxe7+!!.

Black cannot capture the white rook (22...Qxe7 23.Rxc8+ Rxc8 24.Qxc8+ Qd8 25.Qxd8+, etc. and White wins with his extra piece, while 22...Kxe7 23.Re1+ Kd6 24.Qb4+ Rc5 25.Re6+! wins as well (the often mentioned 25.Ne6 doesn't amount to much for example 25....Rc8 26.Qf4+ Kc6 27.Qa4+ Kd6), however, White's replies are also limited because Black is threatening mate with Rxc1, as well as threatening to capture White's queen and knight. As a result, Steinitz's rook now "thumbs its nose" at the black king, so to speak: repeatedly checking right in front of the king, which cannot capture it, in order to prevent Rxc1.

♦️The game continued 22...Kf8 23.Rf7+ Kg8 24.Rg7+ Kh8 25.Rxh7+!!
And Black resigned 😧😧
This crucial move eliminates the h-pawn and allows White to bring in his queen to attack without ever allowing Black to play Rxc1 and mate. Bowing to the inevitable (or perhaps frustrated that even with mate in one, he could not capitalize), von Bardeleben simply left the tournament hall, letting his time run out. Steinitz demonstrated for the spectators how the game might have continued:

25...Kg8 26.Rg7+ Kh8 27.Qh4+ Kxg7 28.Qh7+ Kf8 29.Qh8+ Ke7 30.Qg7+ Ke8 31.Qg8+ Ke7 32.Qf7+ Kd8 33.Qf8+ Qe8 34.Nf7+ Kd7 35.Qd6#

πŸ”° This excellent game named "The Battle of Hastings" in chessgames.com site!!
♦️ Review and download separate PGN fileπŸ‘‡
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@Steinitz-VonBardeleben 1895.pgn
915 B
πŸ”ΈWilhelm Steinitz - Curt von Bardeleben,Hastings (1895)
πŸ”ΈPGN format
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πŸ”ΈAftab Cup Open 2018
πŸ”ΈRound 4
βšͺ️Matinian,Nikita (2506)
⚫️Mosadeghpour,Masoud (2525)
πŸ”Έ1-0
33... Ne3?
Black does not need to be in a hurry because his opponent has no counterplay. He should first have consolidated his position with Qc3, Bd4 and Kh8.
34.Rc1 Kh8 35. Kh1 Bxa3 36. Re1 Nc4??
The final blunder.
36... Bf8 =
37. Rd1 Na5 38. Qf7 1-0
πŸ”ΈAftab Cup Open 2018
πŸ”ΈRound 4
βšͺ️Hakemi,Arman (2245)
⚫️Morchiashvili,Bachana (2382)
πŸ”Έ1-0
26... e5??
Georgian International master loses two pawns for nothing.
26... Nf6 is the logical continuation.
27. Nxe4 dxe4 28. fxe5 Qc4 29. Rxe4 Rb1 30. Ref4 +-
πŸ”ΈAftab Cup Open 2018
πŸ”ΈRound 4
βšͺ️Chavari,Mohammad Mahdi (2160)
⚫️Rastbod,Ali (2311)
πŸ”Έ0-1
10... Qe7
Black's standard plan is: ...Nd7-f8, ...h7-h5-h4(-h3 if possible); alternatively ...Bc8-g4 with the pawn on h5; ...Nf8-h7-g5 etc. with a kingside attack. Meanwhile, White creates counterplay on the queenside and in the centre.
11. b4 Nf8 12. Bb2 h5 13. Rac1 Bf5 14. Nb3
A logical plan after ...Bc8-f5: d4-d5 and Nb3-d4. Actually, White's position turns out to be quite pleasant, which means that Black should look into this system more carefully.
14...N8h7 15. d5 Ng5 Nd4 Bg4 17. c5 dxc5 18. bxc5 Qxc5 19. Qb3 Qb6 20. Ncb5 Grischuk-Caruana Β½-Β½ Paris Fide 2013