Unity Chess Strategy Multiple Choice 129
public poll
A) Ra1 β 7
πππππππ 70%
Jayden, @SteveWongso, @RichardPeng, @AryanLeekha, Hansika, Matthew, Kasyap
C) Rfe1 β 2
ππ 20%
@Somebody_Sophia, Alan
B) Nd2 β 1
π 10%
@Lornyellor
π₯ 10 people voted so far.
public poll
A) Ra1 β 7
πππππππ 70%
Jayden, @SteveWongso, @RichardPeng, @AryanLeekha, Hansika, Matthew, Kasyap
C) Rfe1 β 2
ππ 20%
@Somebody_Sophia, Alan
B) Nd2 β 1
π 10%
@Lornyellor
π₯ 10 people voted so far.
Unity Chess Endgame Multiple Choice 129
public poll
A) Kc3 β 11
πππππππ 79%
@Ismailaqa, @MohamadAsp, Jayden, @SteveWongso, @Khoda1745, Farshid, @AryanLeekha, Vedant, Hansika, Alan, Kasyap
B) Ke1 β 2
π 14%
@Lornyellor, @jodchess
C) Kd3 β 1
π 7%
@Somebody_Sophia
π₯ 14 people voted so far.
public poll
A) Kc3 β 11
πππππππ 79%
@Ismailaqa, @MohamadAsp, Jayden, @SteveWongso, @Khoda1745, Farshid, @AryanLeekha, Vedant, Hansika, Alan, Kasyap
B) Ke1 β 2
π 14%
@Lornyellor, @jodchess
C) Kd3 β 1
π 7%
@Somebody_Sophia
π₯ 14 people voted so far.
π΄ Today is birthday of Yuriy Kuzubov
β¦οΈ Ukrainian chess Grandmaster
πππππ Happy birthday πΊπβοΈππΈπ·
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@unitychess
β¦οΈ Ukrainian chess Grandmaster
πππππ Happy birthday πΊπβοΈππΈπ·
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
#Polugaevsky
πΉ Lev Polugaevsky
πΉ Soviet Chess Grandmaster and Writer
βͺοΈ Born: November 20, 1934
β’ Mogilev, Belarus
βͺοΈ Died: August 30, 1995
β’ Paris, France
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
πΉ Lev Polugaevsky
πΉ Soviet Chess Grandmaster and Writer
βͺοΈ Born: November 20, 1934
β’ Mogilev, Belarus
βͺοΈ Died: August 30, 1995
β’ Paris, France
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
π΅ About Lev Polugaevsky
πΉ Lev Polugaevsky
πΉ Soviet Chess Grandmaster and Writer
βͺοΈ Born: November 20, 1934
β’ Mogilev, Belarus
βͺοΈ Died: August 30, 1995
β’ Paris, France
π Lev Abramovich Polugaevsky was an International Grandmaster of chess and frequent contender for the World Championship, although he never achieved that title.
Polugayevsky was born in Mogilev. In 1953, he took second place in a strong Russian tournament, gaining his master norm. Polugaevsky was twice Soviet champion, in 1967 and 1968 and twice finished runner-up. He participated in five Candidates matches.
Polugaevsky had an excellent record in the Olympiads as well.
Polugaevsky was a highly respected chess author.
His 1977 book Grandmaster Preparation (now out of print) is a classic that contains notable insights into his own thinking as he crafted the variation in the Sicilian that bears his name. He went about his writing with the same meticulous care as characterized his analyses, and was contemptuous of the many less thorough authors who sought to profit from the post Fischer chess boom with shoddy work, memorably commenting that "Ninety per cent of all chess books you can open at page one and then immediately close again for ever. Sometimes you see books that have been written in one month. I don't like that. You should take at least two years for a book, or not do it [at] all."
π SOURCE:WIKIPEDIA & CHESSGAMES.COM
β¦οΈ A memorable short game by Polugaevskyπ
πΈ Lev Polugaevsky vs Tigran Vartanovich Petrosian
πΈ USSR Championship (1960), Leningrad URS, rd 14, Feb-16
πΈ Nimzo-Indian Defense: Normal Variation. Gligoric System Exchange at c4 (E54)
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN fileπ
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
πΉ Lev Polugaevsky
πΉ Soviet Chess Grandmaster and Writer
βͺοΈ Born: November 20, 1934
β’ Mogilev, Belarus
βͺοΈ Died: August 30, 1995
β’ Paris, France
π Lev Abramovich Polugaevsky was an International Grandmaster of chess and frequent contender for the World Championship, although he never achieved that title.
Polugayevsky was born in Mogilev. In 1953, he took second place in a strong Russian tournament, gaining his master norm. Polugaevsky was twice Soviet champion, in 1967 and 1968 and twice finished runner-up. He participated in five Candidates matches.
Polugaevsky had an excellent record in the Olympiads as well.
Polugaevsky was a highly respected chess author.
His 1977 book Grandmaster Preparation (now out of print) is a classic that contains notable insights into his own thinking as he crafted the variation in the Sicilian that bears his name. He went about his writing with the same meticulous care as characterized his analyses, and was contemptuous of the many less thorough authors who sought to profit from the post Fischer chess boom with shoddy work, memorably commenting that "Ninety per cent of all chess books you can open at page one and then immediately close again for ever. Sometimes you see books that have been written in one month. I don't like that. You should take at least two years for a book, or not do it [at] all."
π SOURCE:WIKIPEDIA & CHESSGAMES.COM
β¦οΈ A memorable short game by Polugaevskyπ
πΈ Lev Polugaevsky vs Tigran Vartanovich Petrosian
πΈ USSR Championship (1960), Leningrad URS, rd 14, Feb-16
πΈ Nimzo-Indian Defense: Normal Variation. Gligoric System Exchange at c4 (E54)
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN fileπ
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
@Polugaevsky-Petrosian 1960.pgn
568 B
βͺοΈ Lev Polugaevsky - Tigran Petrosian, Leningrad 1960
βͺοΈ PGN format
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
βͺοΈ PGN format
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
The opening round of the international tournament at Tallinn, 16th Feb 1975.
Among the pairings: Keres v. MaroviΔ, Γlafsson v. Taimanov, Rytov v. Spassky, Rom. HernΓ‘ndez v. Bronstein.
@UnityChess
Among the pairings: Keres v. MaroviΔ, Γlafsson v. Taimanov, Rytov v. Spassky, Rom. HernΓ‘ndez v. Bronstein.
@UnityChess
"Every top player has his own style, just as every painter has his own personal signature."
πΈ Vladimir Kramnik
@UnityChess
πΈ Vladimir Kramnik
@UnityChess
Tallinn, 23rd Feb 1975. In the 6th round of the international tournament, the US grandmaster William Lombardy is in play v. the Cuban master (later grandmaster) RomΓ‘n HernΓ‘ndez.
@UnityChess
@UnityChess
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