15...d5! [Sarana takes advantage of the situation and builds up the strong center.]
[If 15...0β0?! , then 16.Rfd1 Rc6 17.Rd2!Β² β³Rad1]
16.Bg5 d4! [β³RΓc2]
17.Bxf6β’ Bxf6 18.Rfd1 0β0! [Black does not hurry to exploit his positional advantage and consolidates his position first.]
[18...Qc6? 19.Ne4 0β0 20.c3 Rfd8 21.Rd3=]
19.g4 h6!-/+ [19...Rfd8!? 20.Rd3 Qc7! 21.Ne4 Qxc2 22.g5 Be7 23.f6 Bf8-/+]
[If 15...0β0?! , then 16.Rfd1 Rc6 17.Rd2!Β² β³Rad1]
16.Bg5 d4! [β³RΓc2]
17.Bxf6β’ Bxf6 18.Rfd1 0β0! [Black does not hurry to exploit his positional advantage and consolidates his position first.]
[18...Qc6? 19.Ne4 0β0 20.c3 Rfd8 21.Rd3=]
19.g4 h6!-/+ [19...Rfd8!? 20.Rd3 Qc7! 21.Ne4 Qxc2 22.g5 Be7 23.f6 Bf8-/+]
Unity Chess Strategy Multiple Choice 238
public poll
A) Qh5 β 5
πππππππ 50%
Nikhil, @BehroudR, Majid, @SophiaCat_does_Chess, @A_Somewhat_Cool_Guy
B) a5 β 3
ππππ 30%
@kord_sol, Nagaprasad, Jai
C) Rg6 β 2
πππ 20%
@fantastic45, Ψ§ΩΫΩ
π₯ 10 people voted so far.
public poll
A) Qh5 β 5
πππππππ 50%
Nikhil, @BehroudR, Majid, @SophiaCat_does_Chess, @A_Somewhat_Cool_Guy
B) a5 β 3
ππππ 30%
@kord_sol, Nagaprasad, Jai
C) Rg6 β 2
πππ 20%
@fantastic45, Ψ§ΩΫΩ
π₯ 10 people voted so far.
Unity Chess Endgame Multiple Choice 238
public poll
B) Bd4 β 11
πππππππ 85%
@Jalalam_attar, Jonas, @shahriarmz88, Nikhil, @BehroudR, Ψ§ΩΫΩ, Nagaprasad, @A_Somewhat_Cool_Guy, Jai, Matthew, Florentino
A) f4 β 1
π 8%
@SophiaCat_does_Chess
C) Kf1 β 1
π 8%
@fantastic45
π₯ 13 people voted so far.
public poll
B) Bd4 β 11
πππππππ 85%
@Jalalam_attar, Jonas, @shahriarmz88, Nikhil, @BehroudR, Ψ§ΩΫΩ, Nagaprasad, @A_Somewhat_Cool_Guy, Jai, Matthew, Florentino
A) f4 β 1
π 8%
@SophiaCat_does_Chess
C) Kf1 β 1
π 8%
@fantastic45
π₯ 13 people voted so far.
According to Stockfish the player who had the lowest number of blunders was Capablanca only 0.44% of his moves were blunders.
Bobby Fischer basically had the same result.
@UnityChess
Bobby Fischer basically had the same result.
@UnityChess
"A chess game is divided into three stages: the first, when you hope you have the advantage, the second when you believe you have an advantage, and the third... when you know you're going to lose!"
πΈ Savielly Tartakower
@UnityChess
πΈ Savielly Tartakower
@UnityChess
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A Russian spectator lady trying very hard to make eye contact with Capablanca during a February 1935 simultaneous exhibition in Leningrad.
@UnityChess
@UnityChess
β
Goryachkina is currently #8 rated women in the world.
β She won her first gold medal at the girls under 10 world championship in 2008.
β In 2013, she finished 2nd in Russian U19 Open championship competing with boys.
β She is 2-times Russian Womenβs Champion (2015, 2017).
β In 2018 Goryachkina became a grandmaster.
β She has a slight fear of darkness and closed space.
β She likes detective series and movies.
β She won her first gold medal at the girls under 10 world championship in 2008.
β In 2013, she finished 2nd in Russian U19 Open championship competing with boys.
β She is 2-times Russian Womenβs Champion (2015, 2017).
β In 2018 Goryachkina became a grandmaster.
β She has a slight fear of darkness and closed space.
β She likes detective series and movies.
The last free day at #FIDEWomenCandidates: a large simultaneous display on 50 boards took place on pedestrian Bauman street. Children and senior players faced GMs Alisa Galliamova, Sergey Shipov, and Evgeny Miroshnichenko.