Unity Chess Strategy Multiple Choice 102
public poll
B) d4 β 9
πππππππ 90%
@mahyarebrahimi1983, future, Gavin, Nikhil, Babak, @Sophia_Peng, @RichardPeng, @WataxPin, Michael
C) Rbc1 β 1
π 10%
@hoseini139562
A) a4
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 10 people voted so far.
public poll
B) d4 β 9
πππππππ 90%
@mahyarebrahimi1983, future, Gavin, Nikhil, Babak, @Sophia_Peng, @RichardPeng, @WataxPin, Michael
C) Rbc1 β 1
π 10%
@hoseini139562
A) a4
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 10 people voted so far.
Unity Chess Endgame Multiple Choice 102
public poll
A) QΓe4 β 9
πππππππ 82%
future, Gavin, Nikhil, @hoseini139562, Ali rezazadeh70, @h_a_d_I_1169, @RichardPeng, @WataxPin, Michael
C) Rf5 β 2
ππ 18%
@Sophia_Peng, Ali
B) fΓe4
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
public poll
A) QΓe4 β 9
πππππππ 82%
future, Gavin, Nikhil, @hoseini139562, Ali rezazadeh70, @h_a_d_I_1169, @RichardPeng, @WataxPin, Michael
C) Rf5 β 2
ππ 18%
@Sophia_Peng, Ali
B) fΓe4
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
4 tied for the lead at #SunwaySitges going into the last round this Sunday at 9:30 a.m. CET.
http://bit.ly/2BAev6D
http://bit.ly/2BAev6D
chess24.com
Ivanchuk, Vassily vs. Andreikin, Dmitry | 5th Sunway Sitges International 2018
Replay the 5th Sunway Sitges International Round 10 game played on 23/12/2018 with computer analysis
English grandmaster John Nunn, photographed in play v. Vlastimil Hort in the 8th round of the OHRA tournament in Amsterdam, 8th August, 1988.
@UnityChess
@UnityChess
"Sometimes, if you are nervous, it could actually turn out to be a manifestation of your exhaustion. The point is that any setback is bad, but if you see it from a perspective, you'll recover."
πΈ Viswanathan Anand
@UnityChess
πΈ Viswanathan Anand
@UnityChess
UNITY CHESS INFOGRAPHIC
π΅ Chess History - Tournaments
πΉ Leningrad 1974
πΉ42nd Soviet Chess Champion
#chess_history_tornaments
#Leningrad1974
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
π΅ Chess History - Tournaments
πΉ Leningrad 1974
πΉ42nd Soviet Chess Champion
#chess_history_tornaments
#Leningrad1974
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
π΅ Chess History - Tournaments
πΉ Leningrad 1974
πΉ 30 November - 23 December
πΉ 42nd Soviet Chess Champion
π° CHAMPION: Alexander Beliavsky | 9.5/15 (+6 -2 =7) |
SHARED WITH: Mikhail Tal | 9.5/15 (+6 -2 =7) |
β¦οΈ The 42nd Soviet Chess Championship was a category XII event played in Leningrad from November 30 to December 23, 1974. Sixteen of the Soviet Union's strongest grandmasters and masters competed.
The players including (in order of Elo):
βͺοΈ Mikhail Tal (2635),
βͺοΈ Lev Polugaevsky (2630),
βͺοΈ Gennadi Kuzmin (2600),
βͺοΈ Mark Taimanov (2580),
βͺοΈ Vladimir Savon (2575),
βͺοΈ Evgeni Vasiukov (2560),
βͺοΈ Vitaly Tseshkovsky (2545),
βͺοΈ Yuri Balashov (2540),
βͺοΈ Rafael Vaganian (2540),
βͺοΈ Karen Grigorian (2520),
βͺοΈ Mark Dvoretsky (2495),
βͺοΈ Oleg Romanishin (2470),
βͺοΈ Alexander Beliavsky (2460),
βͺοΈ Viktor Kupreichik (2460),
βͺοΈ Boris Gulko (2435), and
βͺοΈ Lev Alburt (2420).
The 21 year old Beliavsky won his first Soviet crown and Tal won his fifth as they tied for first place at 9.5/15, after Beliavsky defeated Tal in the penultimate round to draw level with him, with both drawing their last round games.
π SOURCE: CHESSGAMES.COM
πΉ The final standings and crosstable was as aboveπ
πΉ Download "Leningrad 1974 Games Database" by PGN formatπ
πΉ Review our selected game from Baku 1972 tournamentπ
#chess_history_tornaments
#Leningrad1974
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
πΉ Leningrad 1974
πΉ 30 November - 23 December
πΉ 42nd Soviet Chess Champion
π° CHAMPION: Alexander Beliavsky | 9.5/15 (+6 -2 =7) |
SHARED WITH: Mikhail Tal | 9.5/15 (+6 -2 =7) |
β¦οΈ The 42nd Soviet Chess Championship was a category XII event played in Leningrad from November 30 to December 23, 1974. Sixteen of the Soviet Union's strongest grandmasters and masters competed.
The players including (in order of Elo):
βͺοΈ Mikhail Tal (2635),
βͺοΈ Lev Polugaevsky (2630),
βͺοΈ Gennadi Kuzmin (2600),
βͺοΈ Mark Taimanov (2580),
βͺοΈ Vladimir Savon (2575),
βͺοΈ Evgeni Vasiukov (2560),
βͺοΈ Vitaly Tseshkovsky (2545),
βͺοΈ Yuri Balashov (2540),
βͺοΈ Rafael Vaganian (2540),
βͺοΈ Karen Grigorian (2520),
βͺοΈ Mark Dvoretsky (2495),
βͺοΈ Oleg Romanishin (2470),
βͺοΈ Alexander Beliavsky (2460),
βͺοΈ Viktor Kupreichik (2460),
βͺοΈ Boris Gulko (2435), and
βͺοΈ Lev Alburt (2420).
The 21 year old Beliavsky won his first Soviet crown and Tal won his fifth as they tied for first place at 9.5/15, after Beliavsky defeated Tal in the penultimate round to draw level with him, with both drawing their last round games.
π SOURCE: CHESSGAMES.COM
πΉ The final standings and crosstable was as aboveπ
πΉ Download "Leningrad 1974 Games Database" by PGN formatπ
πΉ Review our selected game from Baku 1972 tournamentπ
#chess_history_tornaments
#Leningrad1974
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
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π΅ Review our selected game from "Leningrad 1974" chess tournament:
A short game in round 11 which has ended by 17 moves!! π
πΈ Alexander Beliavsky vs Gennadi Kuzmin
πΈ USSR Championship (1974), Leningrad URS, rd 11, Dec-15
πΈ Pirc Defense: 150 Attack (B07)
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
A short game in round 11 which has ended by 17 moves!! π
πΈ Alexander Beliavsky vs Gennadi Kuzmin
πΈ USSR Championship (1974), Leningrad URS, rd 11, Dec-15
πΈ Pirc Defense: 150 Attack (B07)
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
πΈchess.com IoM Masters Douglas ENG 2018
πΈRound 3
βͺοΈPrithu,Gupta (2458)
β«οΈAdhiban,Baskaran (2668)
πΈ0-1
πΈRound 3
βͺοΈPrithu,Gupta (2458)
β«οΈAdhiban,Baskaran (2668)
πΈ0-1
22...Rxb6! [A correct decision that needs to the well-calculated variations.]
23.Rxb6 Bh6+ 24.Kd1 Bxc1 25.Rxb7 Ke8 26.Kxc1 [26.Rxd7 Kxd7 27.Bb5+ Kc7 28.Kxc1 Kb6 29.Kd2Β³]
26...Rc8! [The point of Black's 22nd move.]
[26...Rxa4? 27.Bb3 Ra5 28.Kc2Β±]
27.Kb2 [27.Rb4 d5Β΅]
27...Rxc4 28.Kb3 Rc1 29.Ra7 d5 [29...Rb1+! 30.Kc3 Rg1 31.g3 Rg2 32.a5 Rxh2 33.a3 Rh3β+]
30.exd5 exd5 31.Ra8+ Bc8 32.Ra5 d4β+ 0β1
23.Rxb6 Bh6+ 24.Kd1 Bxc1 25.Rxb7 Ke8 26.Kxc1 [26.Rxd7 Kxd7 27.Bb5+ Kc7 28.Kxc1 Kb6 29.Kd2Β³]
26...Rc8! [The point of Black's 22nd move.]
[26...Rxa4? 27.Bb3 Ra5 28.Kc2Β±]
27.Kb2 [27.Rb4 d5Β΅]
27...Rxc4 28.Kb3 Rc1 29.Ra7 d5 [29...Rb1+! 30.Kc3 Rg1 31.g3 Rg2 32.a5 Rxh2 33.a3 Rh3β+]
30.exd5 exd5 31.Ra8+ Bc8 32.Ra5 d4β+ 0β1
21.Rbc1 [21.d4! would be stronger. Attempting to open up the game in order to exploit White's advantage in space. 21...exd4 22.Nxd4 Nf6 23.Qc2 Rd7 24.Nf5Β²; 21.a4 c5 22.b5 (22.bxc5 Nxc5 23.Nxc5 b6 24.d4 exd4 25.Qxd4 Bxc5=) 22...Bd6 23.Nd2 Nf8 24.Nc4Β²]
21...b6 22.d4 Bb7 23.Red1 Qa8 24.f4 [24.f3; 24.a4 exd4 25.Nxd4 Ne5 26.Nf5 c5 27.f3 Qc8 28.bxc5 Nd7 29.a5Β²]
24...exf4 25.gxf4 c5 26.d5 Nf6 27.Nd2 Rcc8 28.bxc5 [28.b5 Rcd8 29.Qd3+/=]
28...Bxc5 29.Bxc5 Rxc5 30.Qd4 Nh5 31.Qf2 f5 32.Rxc5 bxc5 33.d6 fxe4 34.Nc4 Nf6 35.d7 Rd8 36.Ne5 Bd5 37.Qxc5 Qb7 38.Qe7 Qb6+ 39.Kh2 Rf8 40.Rc1 Qb8 41.Rc5 Ba2 42.Bxe4 Kh8 [42...Nxe4 43.Qxf8+ Qxf8 44.Rc8+β]
43.Rb5 Qd8 44.Qxd8 Rxd8 45.Bf5
1β0
21...b6 22.d4 Bb7 23.Red1 Qa8 24.f4 [24.f3; 24.a4 exd4 25.Nxd4 Ne5 26.Nf5 c5 27.f3 Qc8 28.bxc5 Nd7 29.a5Β²]
24...exf4 25.gxf4 c5 26.d5 Nf6 27.Nd2 Rcc8 28.bxc5 [28.b5 Rcd8 29.Qd3+/=]
28...Bxc5 29.Bxc5 Rxc5 30.Qd4 Nh5 31.Qf2 f5 32.Rxc5 bxc5 33.d6 fxe4 34.Nc4 Nf6 35.d7 Rd8 36.Ne5 Bd5 37.Qxc5 Qb7 38.Qe7 Qb6+ 39.Kh2 Rf8 40.Rc1 Qb8 41.Rc5 Ba2 42.Bxe4 Kh8 [42...Nxe4 43.Qxf8+ Qxf8 44.Rc8+β]
43.Rb5 Qd8 44.Qxd8 Rxd8 45.Bf5
1β0