Unity Chess Endgame Multiple Choice 195
public poll
B) Ne1 β 8
πππππππ 89%
Gavin, Nikhil, @FrozenBlade, Alexander, @A_Wild_Richard, @AryanLeekha, Hansika, Kasyap
C) Ne5 β 1
π 11%
@Sophia_Giraffe
A) Nd4
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 9 people voted so far.
public poll
B) Ne1 β 8
πππππππ 89%
Gavin, Nikhil, @FrozenBlade, Alexander, @A_Wild_Richard, @AryanLeekha, Hansika, Kasyap
C) Ne5 β 1
π 11%
@Sophia_Giraffe
A) Nd4
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 9 people voted so far.
Forwarded from Unity Chess Club
UNITY CHESS INFOGRAPHIC
π΅ Chess History - Tournaments
πΉ 19th USSR Chess Championship
πΉ Moscow 1951
#chess_history_tornaments
#Moscow_1951
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
π΅ Chess History - Tournaments
πΉ 19th USSR Chess Championship
πΉ Moscow 1951
#chess_history_tornaments
#Moscow_1951
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
Forwarded from Unity Chess Club
β³οΈ Chess History - Tournaments
π’ 19th USSR Chess Championship
π’ Moscow 1951
π’ November 11 β December 14
π° USSR Chess Championship (1948 ) - Moscow
CHAMPION: Paul Keres, 12/17 (+9 -2 =6)
β The 19th Soviet Chess Championship took place in the capital city of Moscow from November 11 to December 14, 1951. Eighteen of the Soviet Union's strongest players, including the reigning world champion, participated in the round robin event.
βͺοΈ Fourteen of the players qualified from the semi-final tournaments played earlier in the year.
Nikolai Novotelnov, Isaac Lipnitsky, and Mark Taimanov qualified from Baku; Vasily Smyslov, Evgeny Terpugov, Oleg Moiseev, and Nikolai Kopilov qualified from Leningrad;
Lev Aronin, Vladimir Simagin, and Salomon Flohr qualified from Lvov;
Tigran Petrosian, Efim Geller, Yuri Averbakh, and Isaac Boleslavsky qualified from Sverdlovsk.
βͺοΈ Boleslavsky fell ill before the final and was therefore replaced by Igor Bondarevsky, who had placed fifth in the Leningrad semi-final.
βͺοΈ Four invitations were also sent to Paul Keres as returning Soviet Champion, Mikhail Botvinnik as world champion, David Bronstein as world vice-champion, and Alexander Kotov.
β The assembled field was the strongest in the history of the USSR championship at that time, which makes it an especially impressive victory for Keres. It was his second consecutive Soviet crown and his third overall. He edged out runners-up Petrosian and Geller by half a point, and finished two full points ahead of world champion Botvinnik, who only managed to finish in fifth place.
β This tournament was also a World Championship Zonal qualifier. As a result, Geller, Petrosian, Averbakh and Taimanov qualified for the 1952 Stockholm Interzonal. Keres, Smyslov and Bronstein were already qualified for the 1953 Candidates, and Botvinnik, as World Champion, was not eligible.
π SOURCE: CHESSGAMES.COM / GRAEME.50WEBS.COM
πΉ The final standings and crosstable was as aboveπ
πΉ Download "Moscow 1951 Games Database" by PGN formatπ
πΉ Review our selected game from Moscow 1951 tournamentπ
#chess_history_tornaments
#Moscow_1951
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
π’ 19th USSR Chess Championship
π’ Moscow 1951
π’ November 11 β December 14
π° USSR Chess Championship (1948 ) - Moscow
CHAMPION: Paul Keres, 12/17 (+9 -2 =6)
β The 19th Soviet Chess Championship took place in the capital city of Moscow from November 11 to December 14, 1951. Eighteen of the Soviet Union's strongest players, including the reigning world champion, participated in the round robin event.
βͺοΈ Fourteen of the players qualified from the semi-final tournaments played earlier in the year.
Nikolai Novotelnov, Isaac Lipnitsky, and Mark Taimanov qualified from Baku; Vasily Smyslov, Evgeny Terpugov, Oleg Moiseev, and Nikolai Kopilov qualified from Leningrad;
Lev Aronin, Vladimir Simagin, and Salomon Flohr qualified from Lvov;
Tigran Petrosian, Efim Geller, Yuri Averbakh, and Isaac Boleslavsky qualified from Sverdlovsk.
βͺοΈ Boleslavsky fell ill before the final and was therefore replaced by Igor Bondarevsky, who had placed fifth in the Leningrad semi-final.
βͺοΈ Four invitations were also sent to Paul Keres as returning Soviet Champion, Mikhail Botvinnik as world champion, David Bronstein as world vice-champion, and Alexander Kotov.
β The assembled field was the strongest in the history of the USSR championship at that time, which makes it an especially impressive victory for Keres. It was his second consecutive Soviet crown and his third overall. He edged out runners-up Petrosian and Geller by half a point, and finished two full points ahead of world champion Botvinnik, who only managed to finish in fifth place.
β This tournament was also a World Championship Zonal qualifier. As a result, Geller, Petrosian, Averbakh and Taimanov qualified for the 1952 Stockholm Interzonal. Keres, Smyslov and Bronstein were already qualified for the 1953 Candidates, and Botvinnik, as World Champion, was not eligible.
π SOURCE: CHESSGAMES.COM / GRAEME.50WEBS.COM
πΉ The final standings and crosstable was as aboveπ
πΉ Download "Moscow 1951 Games Database" by PGN formatπ
πΉ Review our selected game from Moscow 1951 tournamentπ
#chess_history_tornaments
#Moscow_1951
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
Forwarded from Unity Chess Club
@Moscow1951.pgn
104.4 KB
βIt is very difficult to play a single blitz game! You want to play for a long time. So I tend not to do that anymore.β
πΈ Viswanathan Anand
@UnityChess
πΈ Viswanathan Anand
@UnityChess
Harikrishna bounces straight back from losing yesterday to beat Rapport in the #ShenzhenMasters!
https://chess24.com/en/watch/live-tournaments/shenzhen-masters-2019/3/1/2
https://chess24.com/en/watch/live-tournaments/shenzhen-masters-2019/3/1/2
chess24.com
Harikrishna, Pentala vs. Rapport, Richard | Shenzhen Masters 2019
Replay the Shenzhen Masters Round 3 game played on 19/04/2019 with computer analysis