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Rd 4 at Tata Steel: Giri beat Rapport and Vidit beat Van Foreest. All other games were drawn. Ian Nepomniachtchi is in 1st place with 3 out of 4. Rd 5: Van Foreest-Carlsen, Fedoseev-Vidit, Dhankland-Ding, Radjabov-Duda, Giri-Anand, Nepomniachtchi-Rapport, & Kramnik-Mamedyarov.

https://goo.gl/kjvj43
tatagpa19.pgn
25.1 KB
🔹 Tata Steel Chess Masters | Round 4
🔹 PGN format

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tatagpb19.pgn
24.4 KB
🔹 Tata Steel Chess Challengers | Round 4
🔹 PGN format

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On top board, Boris Spassky faces Bent Larsen. Bobby Fischer looks on. On the bottom right of the photo, Svetozar Gligorić can be seen in play on board 5, v. Efim Geller (USSR).

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Forwarded from Unity Chess Club
1970USSRWorld.pgn
29.3 KB
🔸 USSR vs Rest of the World 1970
🔸 PGN format

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“You have to have the fighting spirit. You have to force moves and take chances”

🔸 Bobby Fischer

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Bled, Yugoslavia, 30th September 1961. Bobby Fischer (USA) faces Tigran Petrosian (USSR) in the penultimate round. This encounter made it into Fischer's 'My 60 Memorable Games'.

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Proud member of the winning USSR team at the 24th Olympiad, which took place in La Valletta, Malta, Nov-Dec 1980 - the 17-year-old Garry Kasparov.

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#Reti

✴️ Richard Reti
🔸 Austro-Hungarian-Czechoslovak chess grandmaster
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✴️ Richard Reti
🔸 Austro-Hungarian-Czechoslovak chess grandmaster

📚 Richard Selig Réti was an Austro-Hungarian, later Czechoslovak chess grandmaster, chess author, and composer of endgame studies. He was one of the principal proponents of hypermodernism in chess. With the exception of Nimzowitsch's book My System, he is considered to be the movement's foremost literary contributor.

🔘 Born: May 28, 1889, Pezinok, Slovakia
🔘 Died: June 6, 1929, Prague, Czech Republic
🔘 Education: University of Vienna
🔘 Books: Masters of the Chess Board /// Modern Ideas in Chess (1923)

📚 One of the top players in the world during the 1910s and 1920s, he began his career as a combinative classical player, favoring openings such as the King's Gambit (1.e4 e5 2.f4). After the end of the First World War, however, his playing style changed, and he became one of the principal proponents of hypermodernism, along with Aron Nimzowitsch and others. With the exception of Nimzowitsch's book My System, he is considered to be the movement's foremost literary contributor. He had his greatest early successes in the period 1918 through 1921, in tournaments in Kaschau (Košice; 1918), Rotterdam (1919), Amsterdam (1920), Vienna (1920), and Gothenburg (1921).
In 1925 Réti set a world record for blindfold chess with 29 games played simultaneously. He won 21, drew 6, and lost 2.
Réti was also a notable composer of endgame studies.

♦️ A memorable game by Reti👇
▪️ Richard Reti vs Jose Raul Capablanca
▪️ New York (1924), New York, NY USA, rd 5, Mar-22
▪️ English Opening: Anglo-Indian Defense. King's Indian Formation (A15)

♦️Review and download PGN file👇
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@Reti-Capablanca 1924.pgn
630 B
▪️ Richard Reti - Jose Raul Capablanca, New York 1924
▪️ PGN format
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🔸chess.com IoM Masters Douglas ENG 2018
🔸Round 7
⚪️Sutovsky,Emil (2633)
⚫️Batsiashvili,Nino (2482)
🔸1-0
28.Rxc6!? [An interesting exchange sacrifice to release the knight on e2 to join the attack.]

28...Nxc6 [28...Qxe2?? 29.Rc7! Qd1+ 30.Kh2 Qxd4 31.Rxe7 Qxh4+ 32.Kg1+–]

29.Nf4—> Qe1+?? [A fatal blunder. Black cannot find the right defensive plan. He should have placed his queen on the b1–h7 diagonal.]

[29...Qc2! 30.Nfxe6 fxe6 31.Qxe6+ Kh8 32.Nf7+ Kh7 33.Ng5+ Kh8 34.Nf7+ Kg7 35.Qf6+ Kh7 36.Ng5+ Kg8 37.Qe6+ Kh8 38.Nf7+ Rxf7 39.Qxf7 Qd1+ 40.Kh2 Qxd4 41.Qf6+ Kh7 42.Qf7+ Kh6 43.Qf8+=]

30.Kh2 [△Ng×e6]

30...Qxf2 31.Ngxe6 fxe6 32.Qxg6+ Kh8 33.Qxh5+ Kg8 34.Qg5+ Kh8 35.Nh5! Qf7 [35...Rf7 36.Nf6 Rxf6 37.exf6+– △Qg7]

36.Qh6+

1–0
⚪️#121 (Strategy-White to Move)
🔸Debashis,D (2548)
🔸Trent,L (2391)
🔸chess.com IoM Masters Douglas ENG
17.Nf1 [17.Ndb1! A strong maneuver to transfer the knight to the b5–square via a3. 17...Kh8 18.Na3 Ng8 19.Be3 Rad8 20.Qb3 f5 21.exf5 Qxf5 22.Nab5 Nxb5 23.axb5 Qd3 24.Bf2 Rxe1+ 25.Rxe1 Bb7 26.Qa3 Qd2 27.Bg3 Rd7 28.h3 Re7 29.Rxe7 Nxe7 30.Qxa7 Qc1+ 31.Kh2+–; 17.a5 b5 18.e5 b4 19.Nce4 Nxe4 20.Nxe4 dxe5 21.Nxc5 Qb5 22.Qc2²]

17...Rad8 [17...h5!=]

18.Ne3 Re7+/=

1–0
⚫️ #121 (Endgame-‌Black to Move)
🔸Hoefelsauer,T (2380)
🔸Moksh,Amit Doshi (2224)
🔸chess.com IoM Masters Douglas ENG